2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2011.11.001
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Perception of Vocal Tremor During Sustained Phonation Compared With Sentence Context

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Cited by 32 publications
(32 citation statements)
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References 40 publications
(51 reference statements)
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“…The presence of vocal tremor in the acoustic signal is better perceived in the phonation of sustained sounds than in running speech [5,6]. This is coherent with the nature of voice tremor, that is, instabilities in the voice production system are better noticed when a stable phonation task is performed.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…The presence of vocal tremor in the acoustic signal is better perceived in the phonation of sustained sounds than in running speech [5,6]. This is coherent with the nature of voice tremor, that is, instabilities in the voice production system are better noticed when a stable phonation task is performed.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…However, the question of what type of voice sample is most appropriate for acoustic and/or perceptual analysis has been controversial, resulting in a number of studies examining the relative suitability of sustained vowels versus samples of continuous speech (e.g., Lederle, Barkmeier-Kraemer, & Finnegan, 2012;Maryn & Roy, 2012;Moon, Chung, Park, & Kim, 2012;Zraick, Wendel, & Smith-Olinde, 2005). Arguments in favor of measuring voice quality from sustained vowels contend they are relatively time invariant; free from influences of phonetic context and thereby unaffected by intonation, stress, or speaking rate; easy to elicit, produce, and analyze; more easily controlled; and less affected by the dialect of the speaker and/or listener than continuous speech is (Maryn, Corthals, Van Cauwenberge, Roy, & De Bodt, 2010a;Zraick et al, 2005).…”
Section: Purposementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, speech elicited in specific phonetic contexts, such as those used in the Consensus Auditory-Perceptual Evaluation of Voice (CAPE-V; Kempster, Gerratt, Verdolini Abbott, Barkmeier-Kraemer, & Hillman, 2009), can reveal the existence and nature of some voice disorders (e.g., vocal tremor [Lederle et al, 2012] and adductory spasmodic dysphonia) that may occur more commonly under certain circumstances (at voicing onsets and/or offsets, for example, Awan et al, 2010;Roy, Gouse, Mauszycki, Merrill, & Smith, 2005). However, most acoustic studies of quality assessment from continuous speech use means and/or standard deviations for acoustic measures calculated across the entire sample of speech, and perceptual studies usually assess the overall extent of dysphonia (e.g., Awan, Roy, & Dromey, 2009;de Krom, 1994;Halberstam, 2004;Lederle et al, 2012;Lowell, Colton, Kelley, & Hahn, 2011;Maryn et al, 2010a;Maryn & Roy 2012;Moon et al, 2012;Parsa & Jamieson, 2001;Revis, Giovanni, Wuyts, & Triglia, 1999;Watts & Awan, 2011;Zraick et al, 2005;see Lowell, 2012, or Maryn, Roy, De Bodt, Van Cauwenberge, & Corthals, 2009 This approach limits the extent to which such measures can index quality variations in continuous speech rather than simply overall levels of dysphonia.…”
Section: Purposementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants were instructed to "guess" if they were unsure which item in the pair was shakier. Shaky was selected as the descriptor based on Lederle et al (2012) and Lester and Story (2015).…”
Section: Listening Taskmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These acoustical modulations lead to the perception of a "shaky" sounding voice (Lederle et al, 2012) and increased effort when speaking (Sulica and Louis, 2010). Behavioral treatment of vocal tremor primarily focuses on training voluntary voice adjustments that reduce the perceptual severity of vocal tremor (Barkmeier-Kraemer et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%