Phonation + Vocal Fold Physiology

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Phonation + Vocal Fold Physiology Feburary 6, 2013

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Phonation + Vocal Fold Physiology. Feburary 6, 2013. Average Everydayness. Production exercise comments and grades were e-mailed shortly before class; I’m sending the second one out tonight. Will be due next Wednesday… Today: The Wonderful World of the Larynx! - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Phonation + Vocal Fold Physiology

Page 1: Phonation +  Vocal Fold Physiology

Phonation + Vocal Fold Physiology

Feburary 6, 2013

Page 2: Phonation +  Vocal Fold Physiology

Average Everydayness• Production exercise comments and grades were e-mailed shortly before class;

• I’m sending the second one out tonight.

• Will be due next Wednesday…

• Today:

• The Wonderful World of the Larynx!

• But first: a completely random linguistic detour...

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The Kiki/Bouba Experiment• Originally devised by psychologist Wolfgang Köhler in 1927.

• Updated and replicated in 2001.

• Look at these two figures:

• Which one is bouba and which one is kiki?

• ~95% of both English and Tamil speakers thought the shape on the left was “kiki”, the one the right “bouba”

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Where Were We?• Air squeezed out of the lungs travels up the bronchi...

• Through the trachea (windpipe)

• To a complicated structure called the larynx.

• ...where phonation happens.

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The Larynx• The larynx is a complex structure consisting of muscles, ligaments and three primary cartilages.

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1. The Cricoid Cartilage• The cricoid cartilage sits on top of the trachea

• from Greek krikos “ring”

• It has “facets” which connect it to the thyroid and arytenoid cartilages.

cricoid cartilage

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2. The Thyroid Cartilage• The thyroid cartilage sits on top of the cricoid cartilage.

• from the Greek thyreos “shield”

• The thyroid cartilage has horns!

• Both lower (inferior) and upper (superior) horns

• The lower horns connect with the cricoid cartilage at the cricoid’s lower facet.

• The upper horns connect to the hyoid bone.

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Thyroid Graphic

thyroid cartilage

cricoid cartilage

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Thyroid Angles• The two broad, flat front plates of the thyroid--the laminae--meet at the thyroid angle.

• The actual angle of the thyroid angle is more obtuse in women.

• ...so the “Adam’s Apple” juts out more in men.

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3. The Arytenoid Cartilages• There are two arytenoid cartilages.

• from Greek arytaina, “ladle”

• They are small and pointy, and sit on top of the back side, or lamina, of the cricoid cartilage.

arytenoid cartilages

cricoid cartilage

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The Vocal Folds• These three cartilages are connected by a variety of muscles and ligaments.

• The most important of these are the vocal folds.

• They live at the very top of the trachea, in between the cricoid and thyroid cartilages.

• The vocal folds are a combination of:

• The vocalis muscle

• The vocal ligament

• The vocal folds are enclosed in a membrane called the conus elasticus.

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• Just above the true vocal folds are the “false” (!) vocal folds, or ventricular folds.

• The space between the vocal folds is the glottis.

Vocal Fold View #1

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Vocal Fold View #2• The vocal ligaments attach in the front to the thyroid cartilage.

• ...and in the back to the arytenoid cartilages.

• The glottis consists of:

• the ligamental glottis

• the cartilaginous glottis

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Things Start to Happen• Note that the arytenoid cartilages can be moved with respect to the cricoid cartilage in two ways.

#1: rocking #2: sliding

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The Upshot• The arytenoids can thus be brought together towards the midline of the body.

• Or brought forwards, towards the front of the thyroid.

• The rocking motion thus abducts or adducts the glottis.

• The sliding motion shortens or lengthens the vocal folds.• Check out the arytenoids in action.

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• When the vocal folds are abducted:

• air passes through the glottis unimpeded and voicelessness results.

• The posterior cricoarytenoid muscles are primarily responsible for separating the arytenoid cartilages.

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• Voicing may occur when the vocal folds are adducted and air is flowing up through the trachea from the lungs.

• Two muscles are primarily responsible for adducting the vocal folds.

• The first is the lateral crico-arytenoid muscle.

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• Note that the lateral cricoarytenoid muscles only adduct the ligamental glottis.

• The transverse arytenoid muscles pull together the arytenoid cartilages themselves.

• Thereby closing the cartilaginous glottis.

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The Consequences• The combined forces drawing the vocal folds towards each other produce adductive tension in the glottis.

• Adductive tension is increased by:

• lateral cricoarytenoid muscles

• transverse arytenoid muscles

• Adductive tension is decreased by:

• posterior cricoarytenoid muscles

• Adduction vs. abduction determines whether or not voicing will occur.

• But we can do more than just adduce or abduce the vocal folds...

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Controlling F0• Question: why do women have a higher F0 than men?

• A: Shorter vocal folds open and close more quickly.

• In men:

• Ligamental glottis 15.5 mm

• Cartilaginous glottis 7.5 mm

• Total glottis length 23 mm

• In women:

• Ligamental glottis 11.5 mm

• Cartilaginous glottis 5.5 mm

• Total glottis length 17 mm

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Factor Two

• F0 also depends on the longitudinal tension in the vocal folds.

• I.e., tension along their length, between the thyroid and arytenoid cartilages.

• Higher tension = higher F0

• Lower tension = lower F0

• Q: How can we change longitudinal tension in the larynx?

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• A: We can rotate the thyroid cartilage up and down on its connection with the cricoid cartilage.

• ...like the visor of a knight’s helmet.

• This either stretches or relaxes the vocal folds.

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Contradictory?• No, just complicated. Note:

• Lengthening (stretching) the folds results in higher tension

• ...which results in higher F0

• Shortening the folds results in less tension

• ...which results in lower F0

• “Higher” and “lower” F0 have to be understood relative to the speaker’s normal F0 range.

• still lower for men

• still higher for women

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For the Record• Contraction of the cricothyroid muscle pulls down the thyroid cartilage.

• Interestingly: researchers often study the activity of this muscle using EMG.

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Fun Stuff (= tracheotomy)Peter Ladefoged: “To record the pressure of the air associated with stressed as opposed to unstressed syllables we need to record the pressure below the vocal folds. A true recording of the subglottal pressure can be made only by making a tracheal puncture.This is a procedure that must be performed by a physician. A local anesthetic is applied both externally and inside the trachea by means of a fine needle. A larger needle with an internal diameter of 2 mm can then be inserted between the rings of the trachea as shown in figure 3.3”

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Figure 3.3

“As you can see from my face it is not at all painful. But it is not a procedure that can be carried out in fieldwork situations.”

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For the Record, part 2• Longitudinal tension can also be reduced by the thyroarytenoid muscles.

• Which connect the thyroid to the arytenoid cartilages.

vocal folds

• These muscles are inaccessible to EMG

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Check it out!• Let’s look at some pitch shifting laryngoscopy videos.