Literature DB >> 16521768

Characterizing glottal jet turbulence.

Fariborz Alipour1, Ronald C Scherer.   

Abstract

Air pressure associated with airflow from the lungs drives the vocal folds into oscillation and allows the air to exit the glottis as a turbulent jet, even though laminar flow may enter the glottis from the trachea. The separation of the turbulence from the deterministic portion of the glottal jet was investigated in the excised canine larynx model. The present study is methodological in that the main goal was to examine three methods of obtaining reasonable representations of both the deterministic signal and the residual turbulence portion: (a) smoothing, (b) wavelet denoising, and (c) ensemble averaging. Ensemble averaging resulted in a deterministic signal that disregarded gross cyclic alterations while exaggerating the turbulence intensity. Wavelet denoising can perform an excellent analysis and synthesis of the glottal velocity, but was problematic in determining which levels of analysis to choose to represent both the deterministic and turbulence appropriately. Smoothing appeared to be the most appropriate for phonation velocities because it preserved gross cyclic variations important to perturbations and modulations, while extracting turbulence at what appears to be reasonable levels.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16521768     DOI: 10.1121/1.2151809

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  6 in total

1.  Acquisition of detailed laryngeal flow measurements in geometrically realistic models.

Authors:  Jayrin Farley; Scott L Thomson
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 1.840

2.  Validation of a flow-structure-interaction computation model of phonation.

Authors:  Pinaki Bhattacharya; Thomas Siegmund
Journal:  J Fluids Struct       Date:  2014-07-01       Impact factor: 2.917

3.  Analysis of Direct Simultaneous Measurement of Glottal Airflow Velocity, Subglottal Pressure, and High-Speed Imaging Using Flexible Transnasal Endoscope in a Human Subject.

Authors:  Hideyuki Kataoka; Shiro Arii; Takahiro Fukuhara; Kazunori Fujiwara; Yasuomi Kunimoto; Kensaku Hasegawa; Hiromi Takeuchi
Journal:  Yonago Acta Med       Date:  2016-09-12       Impact factor: 1.641

4.  Early airway structural changes in cystic fibrosis pigs as a determinant of particle distribution and deposition.

Authors:  Maged Awadalla; Shinjiro Miyawaki; Mahmoud H Abou Alaiwa; Ryan J Adam; Drake C Bouzek; Andrew S Michalski; Matthew K Fuld; Karen J Reynolds; Eric A Hoffman; Ching-Long Lin; David A Stoltz
Journal:  Ann Biomed Eng       Date:  2013-12-06       Impact factor: 3.934

5.  Experiments on Analysing Voice Production: Excised (Human, Animal) and In Vivo (Animal) Approaches.

Authors:  Michael Döllinger; James Kobler; David A Berry; Daryush D Mehta; Georg Luegmair; Christopher Bohr
Journal:  Curr Bioinform       Date:  2011       Impact factor: 3.543

6.  Influence of supraglottal structures on the glottal jet exiting a two-layer synthetic, self-oscillating vocal fold model.

Authors:  James S Drechsel; Scott L Thomson
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2008-06       Impact factor: 2.482

  6 in total

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