Publication date: Available online 4 September 2019Source: Journal of Communication DisordersAuthor(s): Sandra Merlo, Patrick M. Briley
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Classifying dysphonic voices as type 1, 2, and 3 signals based on their periodicity enables researchers to determine the validity of acoustic measures derived from them. Existing methods of signal typing are commonly performed by listening to the voice sample and visualizing them on narrow-band spectrograms that require training, time, and are subjective in nature. The current study investigated pitch-based metrics (pitch height and pitch strength) as correlates to characterizing voice signal types.
The purpose of present study was to validate a Korean version of the Voice Catastrophization Index for assessing catastrophization in patients with voice problems in a Korean population.
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Publication date: Available online 5 September 2019Source: Journal of VoiceAuthor(s): Yeon Woo Lee, Geun Hyo Kim, In Ho Bae, Hee June Park, Soon Bok KwonSummaryObjectiveThe purpose of present study was to validate a Korean version of the Voice Catastrophization Index for assessing catastrophization in patients with voice problems in a Korean population.MethodsCase group patients with voice problems (n = 80) and control group patients without voice problems (n = 25) participated in the study. They...
Publication date: Available online 5 September 2019Source: Journal of VoiceAuthor(s): Supraja Anand, Lisa M. Kopf, Rahul Shrivastav, David A. EddinsABSTRACTObjectiveClassifying dysphonic voices as type 1, 2, and 3 signals based on their periodicity enables researchers to determine the validity of acoustic measures derived from them. Existing methods of signal typing are commonly performed by listening to the voice sample and visualizing them on narrow-band spectrograms that require training, time,...
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