Abstract
Vocal fold tissues in animal and human species undergo deformation processes at several types of loading rates: a slow strain involved in vocal fold posturing (on the order of 1 Hz or so), cyclic and faster posturing often found in speech tasks or vocal embellishment (1–10 Hz), and shear strain associated with vocal fold vibration during phonation (100 Hz and higher). Relevant to these deformation patterns are the viscous properties of laryngeal tissues, which exhibit non-linear stress relaxation and recovery. In the current study, a large strain time-dependent constitutive model of human vocal fold tissue is used to investigate effects of phonatory posturing cyclic strain in the range of 1 Hz to 10 Hz. Tissue data for two subjects are considered and used to contrast the potential effects of age. Results suggest that modulation frequency and extent (amplitude), as well as the amount of vocal fold overall strain, all affect the change in stress relaxation with modulation added. Generally, the vocal fold cover reduces the rate of relaxation while the opposite is true for the vocal ligament. Further, higher modulation frequencies appear to reduce the rate of relaxation, primarily affecting the ligament. The potential benefits of cyclic strain, often found in vibrato (around 5 Hz modulation) and intonational inflection, are discussed in terms of vocal effort and vocal pitch maintenance. Additionally, elderly tissue appears to not exhibit these benefits to modulation. The exacerbating effect such modulations may have on certain voice disorders, such as muscle tension dysphonia, are explored.
Highlights
Flow-induced vocal fold oscillation is the basis of voice production in humans and most nonhuman mammals
The current study examined examples in human phonation of small vocal strain modulations on top of a large constant strain
Actual vocal fold tissues relaxed over time and our simulated tissue captured this as shown in the simulated response of a single modulation frequency and a percentage extent but multiple overall strains (Fig. 3)
Summary
Flow-induced vocal fold oscillation is the basis of voice production in humans and most nonhuman mammals. Fundamental frequency (F0) is primarily changed through the stress within the vocal folds; and stress is a function of vocal fold stretch. The more a vocal fold becomes stretched (i.e., strain), the higher will be its oscillation rate and, F0. Vocal folds are composed of tissues with complex time-dependent deformation characteristics. Once tissues are deformed by applying strain, the resulting stress is not constant, but instead decreases with time, a phenomenon known as stress relaxation. After vocal folds are shortened again and strain is released, the tissue recovers. Vocal fold tissues have a highly nonlinear stress-strain response in normal range of use [1]
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