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Results 601 - 650 of 929
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Higgins M B - - 1994
The purpose of this investigation was to study the impact of hearing loss on phonatory, velopharyngeal, and articulatory functioning using a comprehensive physiological approach. Electroglottograph (EGG), nasal/oral air flow, and intraoral air pressure signals were recorded simultaneously from adults with impaired and normal hearing as they produced syllables and words ...
Woo P - - 1994
Acoustic, aerodynamic, and laryngo-video-stroboscopy (LVS) studies were done on 50 patients before and after microlaryngeal surgery for benign vocal fold lesions. Perceptual pre- and postratings were also obtained. After microlaryngeal surgery, statistically significant differences between pre- and posttreatment conditions included postoperative findings of (a) a lowering of mean flow rate, ...
Baynes K - - 1994
Differential hemispheric contributions to the perceptual phenomenon known as the McGurk effect were examined in normal subjects, 1 callosotomy patient, and 4 patients with intractable epilepsy. Twenty-five right-handed subjects were more likely to demonstrate an influence of a mouthed word on identification of a dubbed acoustic word when the speaker's ...
Jiang J J - - 1994
Intraglottal pressure was measured according to a previously described hemilarynx procedure. Three phases were identified for intraglottal pressure: an impact phase, in which the vocal folds come into contact and produce a sharp pressure pulse; a preopen phase, in which there is a progressive pressure buildup due to increased exposure ...
Furusawa K - - 1994
The responsiveness of receptors supplying the oral mucosa to air pressures generated during consonant production was investigated to obtain information about hypothetical mechanisms underlying speech deficits. The delay between the onset of the neural discharge and the pop puff of phonation (mouth-exist pressure) for /pa/ production was significantly shorter and ...
Mullally B H - - 1994
This investigation assessed the effect of an electronic pressure-sensitive probe on the reproducibility of probing-depth measurement. Clinical measurements were made at the mesial and distal aspects of all teeth from the buccal and palatal or lingual aspects. Probing was carried out either in a conventional manner using gentle pressure referred ...
Hessel P A - - 1994
The question of an association between occupational noise exposure and blood pressure has important public health implications. The harmful effects of hypertension are well known, and noise is considered the most pervasive of all occupational exposures. Most previous studies have looked cross-sectionally at blood pressure and noise exposures in workers. ...
Värri A O - - 1994
A new method is presented to study the relationship between reaction time and blood pressure, heart rate and EEG. The method consists of a simultaneous recording of continuous invasive or non-invasive arterial blood pressure, ECG, EEG, EMG and EOG in a sound-isolated chamber while a monotonous visual reaction time test ...
Holmberg E B - - 1994
Measures of inferred subglottal air pressure, glottal airflow waveform characteristics, sound pressure level (SPL) and the acoustic spectral slope were studied for individual speakers with normal voices. Combinations of different levels of subglottal air pressure and varying glottal configurations could result in the same SPL. Relatively high air pressure levels ...
Welzl-Müller K - - 1994
Transiently evoked otoacoustic emissions (TEOAEs) were recorded from 525 ears (children, 3-11 years). Based on visual evaluation, the recordings were classified as TEOAEs present, absent or uncertain. Within each group the distribution of response level and reproducibility as well as of four derived parameters were calculated. The latter comprised: (1) ...
Kanis L J - - 1993
Mechanical input-output functions of the cochlea for pure-tone stimuli are nonlinear for frequencies around the characteristic frequency. To simulate these functions, a long-wave model of the cochlea containing a saturating pressure generator (located at the site of the outer hair cells) is solved in the frequency domain with a quasilinear ...
Baker C F - - 1993
The effects of high ambient stressors (equipment sounds) and social stressors (conversation) on heart rate (HR) and blood pressure (BP) were examined in coronary care patients. Simultaneously occurring sound level in decibels, actual sound, electrocardiogram, and BP were recorded three times/day over 2 days for 20 subjects. Repeated measures ANOVA ...
Sundberg J - - 1993
Belting, a vocal technique typically cultivated in musical theatre singing, differs timbrally from operatic singing in many interesting respects. The underlying phonatory differences have not been previously investigated in detail. Yet, belting is frequently associated with disturbances of voice function. Articulatory and phonatory characteristics are investigated in a female subject ...
Peters A J - - 1993
OBJECTIVE: Our aims were to investigate how airborne sound was distributed within the abdominal cavity of sheep as function of frequency. STUDY DESIGN: Airborne broad-band noise was measured with a hydrophone at 45 locations within the abdomen of five nonpregnant sheep post mortem and with a microphone extraabdominally. Sound pressure ...
Aviv J E - - 1993
There are no published studies evaluating the sensory capacity of the region innervated by the superior laryngeal nerve. A normal sensory capacity is important in this area, since hypesthesia or anesthesia of the pharynx and supraglottic larynx may result in dysphagia and aspiration. This often occurs after stroke or after ...
Sawada Y - - 1993
The purpose of the present study was to investigate the extent of blood pressure elevation during noise exposure, to elucidate the underlying hemodynamic mechanisms and to assess baroreceptor cardiac reflex sensitivity in connection with blood pressure elevation. Twenty-two young normotensive males participated in the experiment and underwent six noise exposure ...
Nakata M - - 1993
Perceived musculoskeletal discomfort caused by the repetition of a light work task was examined by rating the perceived musculoskeletal discomfort and measuring the muscle pressure pain threshold. Thirteen healthy female workers performed a repetitive light work task for 120 minutes. Based on the perceived musculoskeletal discomfort during the work task ...
Sundberg J - - 1993
According to previous investigations, subglottal pressure in singing is adapted not only to loudness but also to fundamental frequency. Here the significance of musical expression to subglottal pressure is analyzed in terms of alternations between stressed and unstressed bar positions. Esophageal pressure was recorded together with the audio signal in ...
Novak C B - - 1993
Evaluation of hand sensibility using measures of threshold and tactile discrimination are standard assessment methods following nerve injury. Many of the available sensory measures for the quantification of hand sensibility lack verification of intertester reliability. Intertester reliability of vibration threshold, cutaneous pressure threshold, two-point discrimination, object identification, and texture identification ...
Jiang J J - - 1993
An excised hemilarynx setup was developed. The phonatory characteristics of nine excised canine larynges were examined. The left vocal fold of each larynx was then removed and substituted with a vertical plexiglass plate. The larynges were phonated again. Recordings were made of phonation threshold pressure, sound pressure level, average glottal ...
Guo C G - - 1993
Computational studies of laryngeal aerodynamics should help clarify the relationships among configuration, air flow, surface pressure, and vocal fold movement within the larynx, and the acoustic consequences of the output glottal air flow. The penalty finite element method [S. W. Kim, Comput. Fluids 16(4), 429-444 (1988a); NASA CR-179357 (1988b); S. ...
Kitajima K - - 1993
The difference in peak intraoral pressure between the consonants /p/ and /b/ (abbreviated as Pr./p-b/) showed a significant correlation with the transglottal pressure during consonant /b/ production. The values of Pr./p-b/ in subjects with vocal fold palsy were smaller than those in subjects with a cancer or polyp. The values ...
Shenoy D - - 1993
Blood pressures in the temporal artery of five normotensive subjects were recorded using a modified auscultatory setup. The setup comprised a pediatric cuff to occlude the artery and a piezoelectric contact microphone to record the Korotkoff sounds. Both the cuff and microphone were held in their respective positions with an ...
Moon J B - - 1993
Vocal tract pressures during speech tend to be maintained in the face of airway leaks that might be encountered by individuals with repaired palatal clefts. This study tested the hypothesis that such constant pressures can be explained as a consequence of constant pressure source characteristics of the respiratory system during ...
Titze I R - - 1993
A brief overview of current research in voice production mechanisms is given. The self-oscillatory behavior of the vocal folds is clarified, along with the identification of preferred tissue modes. Fundamental frequency control is reviewed as a coordinated activity between cricothyroid and thyroarytenoid muscles and lung pressure. Lung pressure is shown ...
Church J M - - 1993
Colonoscope insertion from anus to cecum requires a sound basic technique that minimizes looping and maintains a straight scope. Four adjunct techniques may help advance insertion but none has been carefully evaluated. Accordingly, data were collected prospectively from 417 patients undergoing colonoscopy by the author. There were 223 males and ...
Lasky R E - - 1993
The effects of duration, rise/fall time, integrated pressure, and intensity of a forward masker on the auditory brain stem evoked response (ABR) were examined in three studies. Keeping peak masker intensity constant, integrated masker pressure was a better predictor of ABR latency prolongation than masker duration or rise/fall time in ...
Lewis J R - - 1993
This investigation was designed to evaluate the relationship between aerodynamic measures of velopharyngeal competence and laryngeal function in individuals with repaired cleft palate. Twenty-seven cleft lip and palate or cleft palate individuals, between the ages of 4 and 16 years, were evaluated in an ENT clinic for assessment of vocal ...
Stager S V - - 1993
Changes in airflow and intraoral pressure between baseline and four fluency-evoking conditions--choral reading (CR), metronome pacing (MET), delayed auditory feedback (DAF), and masking noise (NOISE)--were studied in 12 American English nonstuttering speakers. The duration, amplitude, and velocity of airflow and intraoral pressure development during the initial plosive and the duration ...
Sundberg J - - 1993
This article describes experiments carried out in order to gain a deeper understanding of the mechanisms underlying variation of vocal loudness in singers. Ten singers, two of whom are famous professional opera tenor soloists, phonated at different pitches and different loudnesses. Their voice source characteristics were analyzed by inverse filtering ...
Peters A J - - 1993
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of small decreases in battery voltage on the sound pressure level and spectral features of sound within the uterus during vibroacoustic stimulation with a battery-powered electronic artificial larynx. METHODS: In eight pregnant, recently sacrificed sheep, the fluid-borne, intra-amniotic sound pressures resulting from vibration of the ...
Pesák J - - 1993
The article gives one of the possible explanations of the complex event which may be registered when recording the vibrations from the thyroid cartilage in ventral-dorsal direction during phonation and approximately in two octaves of the modal voice. The alternating displacement of the vibrating thyroid cartilage is caused apparently by ...
Wu T N - - 1993
The present study assessed the relationship between noise exposure and blood pressure. The study population consisted of 892 children from two elementary schools. The noise-sensitive group comprised 583 subjects with normal hearing from one school, while the noise-insensitive group comprised 309 deaf-mutes from another school. The deaf subjects had significantly ...
Herø H - - 1993
The present study focused on the effects of argon pressure, mold venting, and investment permeability on the mold filling of titanium and the soundness of titanium castings. Casting soundness was determined by density measurement and x-ray radiography. To achieve complete filling of molds made from a relatively impermeable investment, the ...
Caspers J - - 1993
The goal of this experiment is to find the most important phonetic features of Dutch accent-lending pitch movements, in terms of shape, pitch level and alignment with the segmental structure. Time pressure is used as a heuristic method to isolate important phonetic aspects of pitch movements, assuming that under time ...
Motoki K - - 1992
The spatial distributions of sound pressure in artificial oral cavities were measured to examine the characteristics of wave propagation in the vocal tract. The measurement was performed with plaster replicas of the oral cavity, and pure tones were used as the driving signals to obtain both amplitude and phase distributions ...
Scheibe F - - 1992
This study examined the effects of acoustic exposure at different intensities on local oxygenation of the cochlea. The oxygen partial pressure (pO2) of perilymph in the basal scala tympani was measured polarographically in anesthetized guinea pigs exposed to either wide-band noise at 85 dB SPL or a 10 kHz pure ...
Cooper N P - - 1992
Middle-ear to basilar membrane (BM) velocity transfer functions are reported for seven locations in the hook region of a single cat cochlea. These transfer functions were recorded at high sound pressure levels in a linearized, or passive cochlea, and resemble those reported previously by Wilson and Evans (1983). They demonstrate ...
Umemura M - - 1992
In the present study, we investigated the correlation between the physiological function, heart rate (HR) and the quantity of work performed when A-weighted sound pressure level of factory noise or construction noise was varied during the mental operations of calculation and erosion. Furthermore, we looked for differences in the effects ...
Bartels A - - 1992
A new concept of non-invasive blood pressure measurement by heart sound pattern analysis is described. The known diagnostic criterion of the 'accentuated' second heart sound of a hypertensive patient is here converted into a computer-aided pattern-recognition process for the second heart sound, applicable over the entire scale of blood pressure. ...
Shimoda O - - 1992
Having noted the findings that the frequency spectrum of fluctuation in blood pressure resembles that in R-R interval on ECG, and that both fluctuations are continuous time-related changes, we attempted three-dimensional analysis of blood pressure, R-R interval and time. The serial values in systolic arterial pressure and R-R interval which ...
Brecker S J - - 1992
Cross sectional, M mode, and Doppler echocardiography, apexcardiography, and phonocardiography were used to characterise presystolic cardiovascular sounds in three patients with ventricular disease. Although the aetiology was different (dilated cardiomyopathy, primary pulmonary hypertension, and chronic pulmonary thromboembolic disease), in each case the presystolic sound was associated with a rapid change ...
Bard M C - - 1992
The clinical assessment of aerodynamic parameters is important in the physiology and pathophysiology of laryngeal function. Vocal efficiency is among these objective measurements and can be calculated from simultaneous recordings of subglottic pressure, airflow, and sound intensity. Modern techniques allow us to accurately determine sound intensity and airflow. However, methods ...
Furusawa K - - 1992
Airflow receptor afferents in the oral mucosa responding to changes in intraoral air pressure during blowing were found to be innervated by the infraorbital nerve. They provided one response corresponding to the onset of blowing, a second related to an increase in air pressure, a third corresponding to the cessation ...
Hutchinson C - - 1992
Businesses are under pressure to adopt environmental policies and incorporate them into their strategic business planning as a matter of routine. These pressures are coming from at least five sources--stricter legislation, consumer demand, competitive advantage, staff concerns and community pressure. The challenge is enormous but there is growing evidence that ...
Gagnon R - - 1992
Nine pregnant women near term, with medical indications for internal monitoring during labor, were studied to determine the transmission of sound across maternal soft tissues during vibroacoustic stimulation with an electronic artificial larynx. A miniaturized hydrophone was placed transcervically at the level of the fetal neck under ultrasound guidance. Intrauterine ...
Warren D W - - 1992
There is some evidence that speech aerodynamics follows the rules of a regulating system. The purpose of the present study was to assess how the speech system manages perturbations that produce "errors" within the system. Three experimental approaches were used to evaluate the physiological responses to an imposed change in ...
Titze I R - - 1992
Phonation threshold pressure has previously been defined as the minimum lung pressure required to initiate phonation. By modeling the dependence of this pressure on fundamental frequency, it is shown that relatively simple aerodynamic relations for time-varying flow in the glottis are obtained. Lung pressure and peak glottal flow are nearly ...
Titze I R - - 1992
Vocal intensity is studied as a function of fundamental frequency and lung pressure. A combination of analytical and empirical models is used to predict sound pressure levels from glottal waveforms of five professional tenors and twenty five normal control subjects. The glottal waveforms were obtained by inverse filtering the mouth ...
Takeda M - - 1992
Nowadays, human senses of vision and hearing receive many stimulations. In particular, VDT work is commonly performed by people of all ages. Therefore, in order to regulate working hours we need to measure the fatigue due to VDT work. The current measuring system depends on the flicker value (CFF). This ...
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