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iTalkBetter app significantly improves speech in stroke patients

A UCL-developed app that provides speech therapy for people with the language disorder aphasia has been found to significantly improve their ability to talk.

22 February 2024

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iTalkBetter, developed by the Neurotherapeutics Group at the UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, provides users the digital platform to practice over 200 commonly used words, in their own time and without any limits on the amount of therapy they receive.

While employing games to maintain engagement, the app’s integrated speech recogniser analyses speech in real time to give the user feedback on whether they have named the displayed item correctly.

A new study, published in eClinicalMedicine and funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR), found that when used over a six-week period for around 90 minutes per day, iTalkBetter significantly improved patients’ ability to name items by 13% for the 200 commonly used words. Importantly, spontaneous speech was also found to improve.

Aphasia occurs when a person suffers brain damage, usually to the organ’s left side, leading to difficulties with speech or language. The most common causes are stroke, severe head injury and brain tumours.

Symptoms can vary widely from person to person. However, most people with aphasia have some trouble with their speaking, and may also experience issues with writing, reading and listening.

Currently, the NHS provides around 12 hours of speech and language therapy with further face-to-face therapy available via some charities or privately.

Corresponding author, Professor Alex Leff, an NIHR Research Professor (UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology), said: “Most health care systems massively under dose people with aphasia in terms of the hours of speech language therapy that they are provided with. App delivered therapy is one solution to this problem.
“This is the first randomised controlled trial of an app designed to improve speaking that transfers to a naturalistic speaking task and show an effect on connected speech.”

The researchers tested the app in a phase II randomised clinical trial on 27 people with aphasia as a result of a stroke, between September 2020 and March 2022.

Researchers also used structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to see what happened in the brains of participants when using the app.

Structurally, they found that brain regions related to language perception, production and control increased in volume after practice with iTalkBetter.

Professor Leff added: “This is the first task-based fMRI study in people with aphasia to identify dose-related changes in brain function. The more people with aphasia practiced, the more they were able to activate key auditory processing areas in the undamaged hemisphere.”

iTalkBetter will soon be rolled out as an app available to all suitable patients to use.

The research was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) with support from Wellcome.

Links

  • Upton et al. Efficacy of a gamified digital therapy for speech production in people with chronic aphasia (iTalkBetter): behavioural and imaging outcomes of a phase II item-randomised clinical trial. eClinicalMedicine, Available online 21 February 2024
  • Professor Alex Leff’s academic profile
  • UCL Aphasia Lab
  • UCL Neurotherapeutics Group

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