Abstract

Although stiffness conditions in the multi-layered vocal folds are generally considered to have a large impact on voice production, their specific role in controlling vocal fold vibration and voice acoustics is unclear. Using a three-dimensional body-cover continuum model of phonation, this study shows that changes in vocal fold stiffness have a large effect on F0 and the means and amplitudes of the glottal area and flow rate. However, varying vocal fold stiffness, particularly along the anterior-posterior direction, has a much smaller effect on the closed quotient, vertical phase difference, and the spectral shape of the output acoustics, which are more effectively controlled by changes in the vertical thickness of the medial surface. These results suggest that although changes in vocal fold stiffness are often correlated with production of different voice types, there is no direct cause-effect relation between vocal fold stiffness and voice types, and the correlation may simply result from the fact that both vocal fold stiffness and geometry are regulated by the same set of laryngeal muscles. These results also suggest the possibility of developing reduced-order models of phonation in which the vocal fold is simplified to a one-layer structure.

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