Journal of Voice
Volume 24, Issue 1 , Pages 57-71, January 2010

The Effect of an Artificially Lengthened Vocal Tract on Estimated Glottal Contact Quotient in Untrained Male Voices

  • Christopher S. Gaskill

      Affiliations

    • Department of Communicative Disorders, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama
    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence and reprint requests to Christopher S. Gaskill, PhD, Department of Communicative Disorders, The University of Alabama, Box 870242, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487.
  • ,
  • Molly L. Erickson

      Affiliations

    • Department of Audiology and Speech Pathology, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee

Accepted 9 May 2008. published online 12 January 2009.

Summary 

The use of hard-walled narrow tubes, often called resonance tubes, for the purpose of voice therapy and voice training has a historical precedent and some theoretical support, but the mechanism of any potential benefit from the application of this technique is not well understood. Fifteen vocally untrained male participants produced a series of spoken /ɑ/ vowels at a modal pitch and constant loudness, before and after a minute of repeated phonation into a 50-cm hard-walled glass tube at the same pitch and loudness targets. Electroglottography was used to measure the glottal contact quotient (CQ) during each phase of the experiment. Single-subject analysis revealed statistically significant changes in CQ during tube phonation, but with no discernable pattern across the 15 participants. These results indicate that the use of resonance tubes can have a distinct effect on glottal closure, but the mechanism behind this change remains unclear. The implication is that vocal loading techniques such as this need to be studied further with specific attention paid to the underlying mechanism of any measured changes in glottal behavior, and especially to the role of instruction and feedback in the therapeutic and pedagogical application of these techniques.

Key Words: Artificially lengthened vocal tract, Resonance tube, Vocal tract loading, Voice training, Contact quotient

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 This paper was presented at the 35th Annual Symposium: Care of the Professional Voice, June 2006, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.

PII: S0892-1997(08)00074-X

doi:10.1016/j.jvoice.2008.05.004

Journal of Voice
Volume 24, Issue 1 , Pages 57-71, January 2010