The patient's cough was persistent, effective, and nonproductive and his phonation was normal. |
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Summary: The vocal folds, which are an important element of phonation, vibrate at the slightest sound. |
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Treatment block 1 targeted respiration and phonation. Treatment block 2 targeted articulation. |
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It is possible to durably transform phonation when auditive stimulation is maintained over a certain time. |
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The aim of this surgical procedure is the preservation of a physiologic phonation with optimal oncologic control. |
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There are various ways to improve articulation, respiration and phonation. |
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When damage is more diffuse, many components may be affected, such as those involved in respiration, nasality, phonation, and articulation. |
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To measure the endurance during phonation. |
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The observers could also check whether the whale that produces the phonation has to modify any of its characteristics in order to overcome varying ambient noise conditions. |
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This produces hoarseness, breathiness, increased phonation threshold pressures, decreased vocal efficiency and, commonly, voice fatigue. |
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Left VFP was observed during both phonation and inspiration in the endoscopic larynx examination. |
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Glottalization ceases or modifies phonation by compressing the vocal folds. |
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The simplest aerodynamic parameter of voicing is the maximum phonation time in seconds. |
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At the touch of a button an electronic circuit is engaged to synchronize the camera shutter with the patient's phonation frequency. |
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In that model, murmur is a compound phonation of approximately modal voice plus whisper. |
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Weak masticatory muscles tire easily, so that food is chewed with difficulty, while bulbar muscle involvement leads to problems with phonation, articulation, and swallowing. |
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Summary: One of the well-known characteristics of vocal forcing is postural with an increase in the antero-posterior movements of the trunk and head during phonation. |
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The hypothesis was that at the time of phonation in the tube with a strong flow as recommended in the method, the vocal cords vibrate without contact. This limits the mechanical trauma at this level. |
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Empirical and personal study of one's own phonation organs. |
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Summary: Background: Mass springs models of phonation are used to describe the main behaviours observed in human voicing but their principle of functioning, based on harmonic oscillations, can appear complex. |
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From an articulatory perspective, that terminology is incorrect, as murmur is a different type of phonation from aspiration. |
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Also known as the pulse register phonation or glottal fry, vocal fry is a quality of the lowest registers of the human voice. |
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In German, an abrupt glottalized onset to phonation is frequent in front of word-initial vowels. |
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The five aerodynamic parameters included maximum phonation time, target flow, efficiency, resistance, and phonation threshold pressure. |
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Both vocal folds were normal and moved equally with phonation and respiration. |
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Some sources have described it as a glottal stop, but this is a very infrequent realization, and today phoneticians consider it a phonation type or a prosodic phenomenon. |
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Suprasegmental phenomena encompass such elements as stress, phonation type, voice timbre, and prosody or intonation, all of which may have effects across multiple segments. |
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The left vocal fold appeared to be normal, but its mucosal wave could not be appreciated because the view was blocked by the polyp during phonation. |
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During phonation, fluid in the pseudocysts was displaced during contact. |
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Phonation depends on the sphincter action of the soft palate, tongue, and lips. |
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