Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source.

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Standard

Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source. / Iwarsson, Jenny; Thomasson, M; Sundberg, J.

I: Journal of Voice, Bind 12, Nr. 4, 1998, s. 424-433.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Iwarsson, J, Thomasson, M & Sundberg, J 1998, 'Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source.', Journal of Voice, bind 12, nr. 4, s. 424-433.

APA

Iwarsson, J., Thomasson, M., & Sundberg, J. (1998). Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source. Journal of Voice, 12(4), 424-433.

Vancouver

Iwarsson J, Thomasson M, Sundberg J. Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source. Journal of Voice. 1998;12(4):424-433.

Author

Iwarsson, Jenny ; Thomasson, M ; Sundberg, J. / Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source. I: Journal of Voice. 1998 ; Bind 12, Nr. 4. s. 424-433.

Bibtex

@article{43a6c2b0bce111df825b000ea68e967b,
title = "Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source.",
abstract = "According to experience in voice therapy and singing pedagogy, breathing habits can be used to modify phonation, although this relationship has never been experimentally demonstrated. In the present investigation we examine if lung volume affects phonation. Twenty-four untrained subjects phonated at different pitches and degrees of vocal loudness at different lung volumes. Mean subglottal pressure was measured and voice source characteristics were analyzed by inverse filtering. The main results were that with decreasing lung volume, the closed quotient increased, while subglottal pressure, peak-to-peak flow amplitude, and glottal leakage tended to decrease. In addition, some estimates of the amount of the glottal adduction force component were examined. Possible explanations of the findings are discussed.",
author = "Jenny Iwarsson and M Thomasson and J Sundberg",
year = "1998",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "424--433",
journal = "Journal of Voice",
issn = "0892-1997",
publisher = "Mosby Inc.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Effects of Lung Volume on the Glottal Voice Source.

AU - Iwarsson, Jenny

AU - Thomasson, M

AU - Sundberg, J

PY - 1998

Y1 - 1998

N2 - According to experience in voice therapy and singing pedagogy, breathing habits can be used to modify phonation, although this relationship has never been experimentally demonstrated. In the present investigation we examine if lung volume affects phonation. Twenty-four untrained subjects phonated at different pitches and degrees of vocal loudness at different lung volumes. Mean subglottal pressure was measured and voice source characteristics were analyzed by inverse filtering. The main results were that with decreasing lung volume, the closed quotient increased, while subglottal pressure, peak-to-peak flow amplitude, and glottal leakage tended to decrease. In addition, some estimates of the amount of the glottal adduction force component were examined. Possible explanations of the findings are discussed.

AB - According to experience in voice therapy and singing pedagogy, breathing habits can be used to modify phonation, although this relationship has never been experimentally demonstrated. In the present investigation we examine if lung volume affects phonation. Twenty-four untrained subjects phonated at different pitches and degrees of vocal loudness at different lung volumes. Mean subglottal pressure was measured and voice source characteristics were analyzed by inverse filtering. The main results were that with decreasing lung volume, the closed quotient increased, while subglottal pressure, peak-to-peak flow amplitude, and glottal leakage tended to decrease. In addition, some estimates of the amount of the glottal adduction force component were examined. Possible explanations of the findings are discussed.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

SP - 424

EP - 433

JO - Journal of Voice

JF - Journal of Voice

SN - 0892-1997

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 21909501