Vocal Tract Steadiness

Author:

Zwirner Petra1,Barnes Gary J.2

Affiliation:

1. Voice Research Laboratory VA Medical Center, San Diego and Klinik und Poliklinik für Hals-Nasen-und Ohrenkranke, Klinikum Groβhadern, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, München, Germany

2. Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology VA Medical Center San Diego, CA

Abstract

Acoustic analyses of upper airway and phonatory stability were conducted on samples of sustained phonation to evaluate the relation between laryngeal and articulomotor stability for 31 patients with dysarthria and 12 non-dysarthric control subjects. Significantly higher values were found for the variability in fundamental frequency and formant frequency of patients who have Huntington’s disease compared with normal subjects and patients with Parkinson’s disease. No significant correlations were found between formant frequency variability and the variability of the fundamental frequency for any subject group. These findings are discussed as they pertain to the relationship between phonatory and upper airway subsystems and the evaluation of vocal tract motor control impairments in dysarthria.

Publisher

American Speech Language Hearing Association

Subject

Speech and Hearing,Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference27 articles.

1. Differential speech motor subsystem impairments with suprabulbar lesions: Neurophysiological framework and supporting data.;Abbs J. H.;Clinical dysarthria,1983

2. Aronson A. E. (1985). Clinical voice disorders ( 2nd ed.). New York: Thieme.

3. Predictive coding of speech signals;Atal B. S.;Proceedings of 1967 IEEE Conference on Communication and Processing,1967

4. Vocal tract steadiness in spasmodic dysphonia;Cannito M. P.;Recent advances in clinical dysarthria,1989

5. Darley F. L. Aronson A. E. & Brown J. R. (1975). Motor speech disorders. Philadelphia: WB Saunders Company.

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