| Literature DB >> 23517635 |
Tomáš Vampola1, Jaromír Horáček, Anne-Maria Laukkanen, Jan G Švec.
Abstract
Resonance frequencies of the vocal tract have traditionally been modelled using one-dimensional models. These cannot accurately represent the events in the frequency region of the formant cluster around 2.5-4.5 kHz, however. Here, the vocal tract resonance frequencies and their mode shapes are studied using a three-dimensional finite element model obtained from computed tomography measurements of a subject phonating on vowel [a:]. Instead of the traditional five, up to eight resonance frequencies of the vocal tract were found below the prominent antiresonance around 4.7 kHz. The three extra resonances were found to correspond to modes which were axially asymmetric and involved the piriform sinuses, valleculae, and transverse vibrations in the oral cavity. The results therefore suggest that the phenomenon of speaker's and singer's formant clustering may be more complex than originally thought.Entities:
Keywords: Acoustic mode shapes of vibration; biomechanics of human voice; speaker's and singer's formant; voice production modelling
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23517635 DOI: 10.3109/14015439.2013.775333
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Logoped Phoniatr Vocol ISSN: 1401-5439 Impact factor: 1.487