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Vocal Mechanism Chapter 5. Perry C. Hanavan, AuD. Cultures. The Jimi Hendrix of Mongolia Incredible Human Machine Steven Tyler Wall of Sound Naturally 7 Dr. Patricia Kuhl: Linguist Genius of Babies. Question. The larynx is the: Voice box Throat Esophagus Nasal passage Oral cavity.
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Vocal MechanismChapter 5 Perry C. Hanavan, AuD
Cultures The Jimi Hendrix of Mongolia Incredible Human Machine Steven Tyler Wall of Sound Naturally 7 Dr. Patricia Kuhl: Linguist Genius of Babies
Question The larynx is the: • Voice box • Throat • Esophagus • Nasal passage • Oral cavity
Swallowing Reflex • Bolus of food triggers reflex as it passes tongue above larynx • Larynx elevates • Epiglottis drops down to cover aditus (opening to larynx from pharynx) • Tight adduction of folds
Laryngeal Function for Speech • Attack • Simultaneous • Breathy • Glottal • Termination • Sustained phonation • Vocal register • Whispering
Laryngeal Function for Speech • Attack - process of bringing folds together for phonation, requires muscles (three types): • Simultaneous - adduction and onset of exhalation occurs together • Breathy - airflow begins before phonation “hope”, Breathy phonation - failure to completely close folds • Glottal- used when word begins with stressed vowel, normal process (Hard glottal attack – damaging) • Termination - process of fold retraction (abduction) • Sustained phonation - requires maintenance of tonic (sustained tensing) of musculature (actual phonation does not require repeated adduction and abduction)
Question The only bone of the larynx is: • Thyroid • Cricoid • Arytenoid(s) • Epiglottis • Hyoid
Question The vocalis muscle attaches to: • Thyroid • Cricoid • Arytenoid(s) • B and C • A and C
Question The largest cartilage is the: • Thyroid • Cricoid • Arytenoid(s) • Mandible • Hyoid
Question To close or bring together: • Abduct • Adduct • Neither
Muscles of Larynx • Extrinsic • Have one point of attachment to larynx and other attachment other structure • Intrinsic • Have origin and insertion within larynx
Question The vocalis is an ____ laryngeal muscle: • Extrinsic • Intrinsic • Both • Neither
Myoelastic-Aerodynamic Theory • Model describing voice production (phonation) as a combination of: • Muscle force (myo) • Tissue elasticity (elasticity) • Pressures and flows (aerodynamic) • The Bernoulli Effect: the Physics Behind Your Voice - YouTube
Mucosal Wave • Examples • Mucosal Waves • Mucosal Wave • Asymmetrical Mucosal Wave • Spasmodic dysphonia
Mucosal Wave • Vertical phase difference • Longitudinal phase difference
Question The Bernoulli principle: • As velocity increases, pressure decreases • As velocity decreases, pressure increases • As velocity increases, pressure increases • As velocity decreases, pressure decreases • A and B are true • C and D are true
Bernoulli Principle • As flow increases, pressure decreases • Subglottal air pressure increases and forces vocal folds to abduct • Rapid flow of air through glottal space decreases pressure in the glottis and vocal folds close
Phonation: Glottal Spectrum • Determined by mass, length, and tension • Changes throughout utterance (question vs. statement, etc.) • Males Fo (80-150) • Females Fo (180-250) • Children Fo (250-300)
Glottal Spectrum • Glottal Fo with harmonics • Does not represent what is heard due to vocal tract modulation • The Fo corresponds to the perceived pitch of the voice • The harmonics contribute to the quality of the voice
Fo & Harmonic Spacing • Adult Male • Adult Female • Child
Question Who has the largest harmonic spaces (distance between harmonics)? • Males • Females • Young girls • Young boys • C & D
Voice Quality • Cycle-to-cycle variations in frequency and amplitude can occur from several factors: • Neurologic • Biomechanic • Aerodynamic • Hearing loss (inadequate feedback system)
Voice Quality • Hyperadducted • Hypoadducted
Vocal Registers • Vocal register - differences in mode of vibration of vocal folds • Modal register - pattern of phonation used in daily conversations • Glottal fry- (rough voice) vibrating portion flaccid, lateral portion tensed resulting in strong medial compression with short, thick folds and low glottal pressure • Falsetto - long and extremely thin folds • Whistle register- turbulence on edge of vocal folds • Whispering - not actually phonatory because no voicing partially adducted and tensed to produce turbulence, strenuous and fatiguing
Glottal Fry • Also known as pulse register or Strohbass (straw bass) • Vocal folds vibrate between 30 and 90 Hz • Frying pan sound of eggs frying • Low subglottal pressure • Tension of the vocalis is significantly reduced relative to modal vibration, so that the vibrating margin is flaccid and thick. The lateral portion of folds is tensed creating thick folds • Example
Glottal Fry Vocal Fry
Falsetto • A singing technique that produces sounds that are pitched higher than the singer's normal range • Vocal folds lengthened and become extremely thin • expansion and separation of vocal cords, in which case, only the edges of the vocal cord vibrate, not the entire vocal cord • used by male countertenors to sing in the alto range, before women sang in choirs. • It is a very common technique in soul music, and has also been made popular in heavy metal • How to sing falsetto • Falsetto Voice Phrases
Whistle Register • Register above falsetto • (flageolet register) is the highest register of the human voice • Up to 2500 Hz in females • Product of turbulence on the edge of the vocal fold • Not considered a mode of vibration as product of turbulence • Mariah Carey • Mariah Carey
Whispering • Not a phonatory mode • Voicing removed • Mariah Carey
Whistle and Falsetto • Elton John perfoms Benny and The Jets on Soul Train (falsetto) • Mariah Carey's Whistle Register Collection
Vocal Fry • Vocal fry: Why talking like Kim Kardashian and Katy Perry is bad for your health • What Is Vocal Fry & Is It Bad For You?
Abnormal Voice • Dysphonia - • generic term for any voice that sounds deviant in terms of quality, pitch, and/or loudness • Spasmodic Dysphonia - Muscle Tension Dysphonia - Optimal Breathing Voice Training • Spasmodic dysphonia • Hoarseness Explained Medical Course
Question Maintaining childhood pitch despite having passed through puberty… • Aphonia • Puberphonia • Phonia fear • Non-phonia
Puberphonia • Maintenance of the childhood pitch despite having passed through puberty • Puberphonia • Other voice disorders
Abnormal Voice • Breathy Voice • Hoarse/Rough Voice
FO & Hearing Loss • Leder SB, Spitzer JB, Kirchner JC. Ann OtolRhinolLaryngol. 1987 May-Jun;96(3 Pt 1):322-4. • Speaking fundamental frequency of postlingually profoundly deaf adult men.Investigated speaking fundamental frequency (F0) of 21 postlingually profoundly sensorineurally deaf males • Speaking F0 was significantly higher for the deaf group than for normal-hearing, age-matched men. • Neither duration of profound deafness nor hearing aid usage affected speaking F0 values significantly.
Hearing vs. Hearing Loss J AcoustSoc Am. 1982 Jan;71(1):196-202. Long-term average speech spectra for normal and hearing-impaired adolescents.Monsen RB.Spectra characterized by regular pattern of peaks occurring at multiples of the talkers' fundamental frequencies and by slopes declining at rates of -5 to -6 dB/octave. Adolescents with HL produced spectra for which the harmonic structure ranged from very well defined to the irregular and poorly defined; spectral slopes declined at rates equal to or greater than the normal rate, in some cases declining at twice the normal rate.