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1.
Science ; 377(6607): 760-763, 2022 08 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35951711

ABSTRACT

Human speech production obeys the same acoustic principles as vocal production in other animals but has distinctive features: A stable vocal source is filtered by rapidly changing formant frequencies. To understand speech evolution, we examined a wide range of primates, combining observations of phonation with mathematical modeling. We found that source stability relies upon simplifications in laryngeal anatomy, specifically the loss of air sacs and vocal membranes. We conclude that the evolutionary loss of vocal membranes allows human speech to mostly avoid the spontaneous nonlinear phenomena and acoustic chaos common in other primate vocalizations. This loss allows our larynx to produce stable, harmonic-rich phonation, ideally highlighting formant changes that convey most phonetic information. Paradoxically, the increased complexity of human spoken language thus followed simplification of our laryngeal anatomy.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Larynx , Phonation , Primates , Speech , Vocal Cords , Animals , Humans , Larynx/anatomy & histology , Phonetics , Speech Acoustics , Vocal Cords/anatomy & histology
2.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 149(1): 271, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33514158

ABSTRACT

Ventricular folds are located in the supraglottal region above the vocal folds. Although the ventricular folds do not vibrate under normal vocalizations, they vibrate under certain conditions, e.g., throat singing or ventricular fold dysphonia. In throat singing, the ventricular folds vibrate at the same frequency as (or at integer ratios of) the vocal fold vibration frequency. In ventricular fold dysphonia, on the other hand, the ventricular folds interfere with the vocal folds, giving rise to a hoarse voice. In the present study, the synthetic larynx model was utilized to examine the vocal-ventricular fold oscillations. Our experiments revealed that the vocal and ventricular folds can co-oscillate at the same frequency with an out-of-phase relation. Compared to the control condition, under which no ventricular folds exist, the phonation threshold pressure was increased in the presence of the ventricular folds. Acoustic analysis indicated that jitter was reduced and vocal efficiency was increased by the ventricular folds. Distance between the vocal and ventricular folds did not alter these oscillation properties. A computational model was further simulated to elucidate the mechanism underlying the observed vocal-ventricular fold oscillations. It has been suggested that out-of-phase oscillations of the vocal and ventricular folds are important for sustaining periodic laryngeal vibrations.


Subject(s)
Larynx , Vocal Cords , Voice , Acoustics , Humans , Phonation , Vibration
3.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 377(2160): 20190015, 2019 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31656141

ABSTRACT

A foremost challenge in modern network science is the inverse problem of reconstruction (inference) of coupling equations and network topology from the measurements of the network dynamics. Of particular interest are the methods that can operate on real (empirical) data without interfering with the system. One such earlier attempt (Tokuda et al. 2007 Phys. Rev. Lett. 99, 064101. (doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.99.064101)) was a method suited for general limit-cycle oscillators, yielding both oscillators' natural frequencies and coupling functions between them (phase equations) from empirically measured time series. The present paper reviews the above method in a way comprehensive to domain-scientists other than physics. It also presents applications of the method to (i) detection of the network connectivity, (ii) inference of the phase sensitivity function, (iii) approximation of the interaction among phase-coherent chaotic oscillators, and (iv) experimental data from a forced Van der Pol electric circuit. This reaffirms the range of applicability of the method for reconstructing coupling functions and makes it accessible to a much wider scientific community. This article is part of the theme issue 'Coupling functions: dynamical interaction mechanisms in the physical, biological and social sciences'.

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