Δευτέρα 7 Νοεμβρίου 2016

Acoustic and Auditory Perception Effects of the Voice Therapy Technique Finger Kazoo in Adult Women

S08921997.gif

Publication date: Available online 7 November 2016
Source:Journal of Voice
Author(s): Mara Keli Christmann, Carla Aparecida Cielo
ObjectiveThis study aimed to verify and to correlate acoustic and auditory-perceptual measures of glottic source after the performance of finger kazoo (FK) technique.Study DesignThis is an experimental, cross-sectional, and qualitative study.MethodWe made an analysis of the vowel [a:] in 46 adult women with neither vocal complaints nor laryngeal alterations, through the Multi-Dimensional Voice Program Advanced and RASATI scale, before and immediately after performing three series of FK and 5 minutes after a period of silence. Kappa, Friedman, Wilcoxon, and Spearman tests were used.ResultsWe found significant increase in fundamental frequency, reduction of amplitude variation, and degree of sub-harmonics immediately after performing FK. Positive correlations were measures of frequency and its perturbation, measures of amplitude, of soft phonation index, of degree and number of unvoiced segments with aspects of RASATI. Negative correlations were voice turbulence index, measures of frequency and its perturbation, and measures of soft phonation index with aspects of RASATI.ConclusionsThere was fundamental frequency increase, within normal limits, and reduction of acoustic measures related to presence of noise and instability. In general, acoustic measures, suggestive of noise and instability, were reduced according to the decrease of perceptive-auditory aspects of vocal alteration. It shows that both instruments are complementary and that the acoustic vocal effect was positive.



from #Audiology via xlomafota13 on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2fb1KWr
via IFTTT

Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Δημοσίευση σχολίου