Abstract
The present report presents an attempt to define the physiological parameter used to describe “voice tremor” in psychological stress evaluating machines, and to find its sources. This parameter was found to be a low frequency (5–20 Hz) random process which frequency modulates the vocal cord waveform and (independently) affects the frequency range of the third speech formant. The frequency variations in unstressed speakers were found to be the result of forced muscular undulations driven by central nervous signals and not of a passive resonant phenomenon. In this paper various physiological and clinical experiments which lead to the above conclusions are discussed. a) It is shown that induced muscular activity in the vocal tract and vocal cord regions can generate tremor in the voice. b) It is shown that relaxed subjects exhibit significant tremor correlation between spontaneously generated speech and EMG, with the EMG leading the speech tremor. c) Tremor in the electrical activity recorded from muscles overlapping vocal tract area was correlated with third formant demodulated signal and vocal cord demodulated pitch tremor was correlated with first formant demodulated tremor. d) Enhanced tremor was found in Parkinson patients and diminished tremor in patients with some traumatic brain injuries.
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Inbar, G.F., Eden, G. Physiological evidence for central modulation of voice tremor. Biol. Cybern. 47, 1–12 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00340063
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00340063