2013
DOI: 10.1159/000357707
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Laryngoscopic, Acoustic, Perceptual, and Functional Assessment of Voice in Rock Singers

Abstract: Objective: The present study aimed to vocally assess a group of rock singers who use growl voice and reinforced falsetto. Method: A group of 21 rock singers and a control group of 18 pop singers were included. Singing and speaking voice was assessed through acoustic, perceptual, functional and laryngoscopic analysis. Results: No significant differences were observed between groups in most of the analyses. Acoustic and perceptual analysis of the experimental group demonstrated normality of speaking voice. Endos… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

1
13
0
6

Year Published

2015
2015
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
7

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 33 publications
(20 citation statements)
references
References 29 publications
1
13
0
6
Order By: Relevance
“…During the laryngostroboscopic endoscopies, the participants were able to perform the effects consistently and multiple times, and no indications of harm or damage to the vocal folds or other laryngeal structures was observed by the laryngologist performing the endoscopies. These observations, while qualitative and mainly descriptive, are supported by recent studies that have concluded that rock singers using vocal effects during phonation were observed with no vocal fold pathology, 6 and it has, similarly, been concluded that singers that employ such techniques do not differ from pop singers on acoustic, perceptual, and functional assessment of speaking voice. 10 Coherently, the present study found no related pathology, nor any signs of vocal fatigue or evidence of vocal injury in any of the studied participants prior to, during, or after performing the vocal effects, and no singer reported any such problems on their self-report forms.…”
Section: E11supporting
confidence: 72%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…During the laryngostroboscopic endoscopies, the participants were able to perform the effects consistently and multiple times, and no indications of harm or damage to the vocal folds or other laryngeal structures was observed by the laryngologist performing the endoscopies. These observations, while qualitative and mainly descriptive, are supported by recent studies that have concluded that rock singers using vocal effects during phonation were observed with no vocal fold pathology, 6 and it has, similarly, been concluded that singers that employ such techniques do not differ from pop singers on acoustic, perceptual, and functional assessment of speaking voice. 10 Coherently, the present study found no related pathology, nor any signs of vocal fatigue or evidence of vocal injury in any of the studied participants prior to, during, or after performing the vocal effects, and no singer reported any such problems on their self-report forms.…”
Section: E11supporting
confidence: 72%
“…This paper contributes to such studies of supraglottic activity and the desirability of such activity in singing by investigating 20 profesional singers, and in doing so responds to the problem that 'most studies [previously] included small sample sizes and none assessed specific variables'. 6 Further investigation into the four identified vocal effects as well as other and combined vocal effects is recommended to further uncover the physiological movements involved in such voice production. In addition, it would be interesting to further study the use of vocal effects by means of acoustics, such as long-term average spectrum, or EEG to further investigate the impact these vocal effect strategies have on acoustic parameters as well as on the phonation itself.…”
Section: E12mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…25; 26 ; 27 Healthy opera, 27 pop, rock, and jazz singers 25 ; 26 showed M-L and especially A-P supraglottic activity during singing. In rock singers, 25 the supraglottic activity was found in the singing as well as the speaking voice. These authors 25 suggest that supraglottic activity during professional voice use may not always be a hyperfunctional behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%