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    • Image courtesy of researchgate.net

      researchgate.net

      • While voice production results from a complex fluid-structure-acoustic interaction process, which again depends on the geometry and material properties of the lungs, larynx, and the vocal tract, the end interest of voice is its acoustics and perception.
      pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5412481/
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  2. The Process of Voice. Voice production involves a three-step process. A column of air pressure is moved towards the vocal folds. Air is moved out of the lungs and towards the vocal folds by coordinated action of the diaphragm, abdominal muscles, chest muscles, and rib cage.

  3. Resonance: Voice sound is amplified and modified by the vocal tract resonators (the throat, mouth cavity, and nasal passages). The resonators produce a person’s recognizable voice. Articulation: The vocal tract articulators (the tongue, soft palate, and lips) modify the voiced sound. The articulators produce recognizable words.

  4. Jul 10, 2018 · The voice is the primary source of human communication, whether verbal or nonverbal, melodic, or percussive. It is the complex interaction of the vocal mechanism (respiratory system, vocal folds, and the vocal tract) with the rest of the body that is used to produce speech, song (melody, rhythm, and language) as well as so-called vegetative ...

  5. The voice box (larynx) and vocal folds (sometimes called vocal cords) comprise the vibratory system of the voice mechanism. Resonating System. The vocal tract is comprised of resonators which give a personal quality to the voice, and the modifiers or articulators which form sound into voiced sounds.

  6. This paper provides a review of voice physiology and biomechanics, the physics of vocal fold vibration and sound production, and laryngeal muscular control of the fundamental fre-quency of voice, vocal intensity, and voice quality.

  7. Jun 24, 2020 · Most generally, voice production in humans involves the independent contributions of vocal source dynamics and supralaryngeal filtering, described by source–filter theory (Fant, 1960; Titze, 1994). The voice source involves controlled air flow from the lungs through the glottis (housed in the larynx), which is converted to sound through the ...