Affiliation:
1. David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA 10833 Le Conte Avenue Los Angeles California U.S.A.
2. Department of Head & Neck Surgery David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Los Angeles California U.S.A.
3. Department of Linguistics University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan U.S.A.
Abstract
IntroductionAsymmetry of vocal fold (VF) vibration is common in patients with voice complaints and also observed in 10% of normophonic individuals. Although thyroarytenoid (TA) muscle activation plays a crucial role in regulating VF vibration, how TA activation asymmetry relates to voice acoustics and perception is unclear. We evaluated the relationship between TA activation asymmetry and the resulting acoustics and perception.MethodsAn in vivo canine model of phonation was used to create symmetric and increasingly asymmetric VF vibratory conditions via graded stimulation of bilateral TA muscles. Naïve listeners (n = 89) rated the perceptual quality of 100 unique voice samples using a visual sort‐and‐rate task. For each phonatory condition, cepstral peak prominence (CPP), harmonic amplitude (H1‐H2), and root‐mean‐square (RMS) energy of the voice were measured. The relationships between these metrics, vibratory asymmetry, and perceptual ratings were evaluated.ResultsIncreasing levels of TA asymmetry resulted in declining listener preference. Furthermore, only severely asymmetric audio samples were perceptually distinguishable from symmetric and mildly asymmetric conditions. CPP was negatively correlated with TA asymmetry: voices produced with larger degrees of asymmetry were associated with lower CPP values. Listeners preferred audio samples with higher values of CPP, high RMS energy, and lower H1‐H2 (less breathy).ConclusionListeners are sensitive to changes in voice acoustics related to vibratory asymmetry. Although increasing vibratory asymmetry is correlated with decreased perceptual ratings, mild asymmetries are perceptually tolerated. This study contributes to our understanding of voice production and quality by identifying perceptually salient and clinically meaningful asymmetry.Level of EvidenceN/A (Basic Science Study) Laryngoscope, 2023
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Cited by
1 articles.
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