Every so often, Robert White breaks into song and serenades his 13-year-old son Kieran with a tender Irish lullaby, "That Little Boy of Mine," taught to him by his father.
But the deep-throated voice that used to fill his family's living room in West St. Paul now quivers and shakes. There are times when White, who has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS, a terminal disease that impairs his motor skills, can barely finish the chorus before his voice dips to a hoarsened whisper.
For White, and thousands of other Minnesotans afflicted with neurodegenerative diseases, losing one's ability to speak is one of the most devastating consequences.
Now, however, researchers have found a way to preserve the unique essence of a human voice — in all its idiosyncratic nuance and power — for people with incurable and often debilitating illnesses.
Using new voice database technology, University of Minnesota speech pathologists can record people saying hundreds of sentences and phrases, break them down into phonetic units, and then reconstruct a personalized voice that can be used on a speech-generating device. The end result of this process, known as "voice banking," is a voice that is nearly identical to the person's original, healthy voice.
While the technology is still new, many people feel they are in a race against time to store their original voices before they become unrecognizable to their families and friends. Even the simple act of saying "I love you" can be too much of a strain for people in the later stages of ALS or other neurodegenerative illnesses.
"This is about preserving a person's essential dignity, rather than having to depend on a canned synthetic voice that many find dehumanizing," said Dr. H. Timothy Bunnell, director of the speech-language laboratory in Wilmington, Del., that pioneered the voice-banking technology about a decade ago.
But the process of preserving a voice is an emotional one for families. It comes with the recognition that a loved one is dying, and that even a carefully reconstructed voice — built over a period of weeks or months — will never be an exact match to a person's original speech. Even the most sophisticated audio technology cannot recapture the spontaneous emotion of someone who bursts into laughter, or the gentle timbre of a parent's voice as they sing to a child, researchers say.