| Literature DB >> 31370647 |
Andrew J Ortiz1, Laura E Toles1, Katherine L Marks1, Silvia Capobianco2, Daryush D Mehta2, Robert E Hillman2, Jarrad H Van Stan2.
Abstract
Ambulatory voice monitoring is a promising tool for investigating phonotraumatic vocal hyperfunction (PVH), associated with the development of vocal fold lesions. Since many patients with PVH are professional vocalists, a classifier was developed to better understand phonatory mechanisms during speech and singing. Twenty singers with PVH and 20 matched healthy controls were monitored with a neck-surface accelerometer-based ambulatory voice monitor. An expert-labeled ground truth data set was used to train a logistic regression on 15 subject-pairs with fundamental frequency and autocorrelation peak amplitude as input features. Overall classification accuracy of 94.2% was achieved on the held-out test set.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31370647 PMCID: PMC6624122 DOI: 10.1121/1.5115804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Acoust Soc Am ISSN: 0001-4966 Impact factor: 1.840