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L 17 The Human Voice
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Page 1: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

L 17 The Human Voice

Page 2: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

The Vocal Tract

epiglottis

Page 3: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.
Page 4: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

Oscillator:Air under pressure from the lungs make the

vocal folds vibrate.

Without the “resonator cavities”, the vibrations sound like lips vibrating, or a trumpet or

trombone mouthpiece being “buzzed” (with a central frequency when singing).

The tension in the vocal muscles control the pitch.

Page 5: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

Range of Frequencies for the Normal Speaking Human Voice

Males: 70-200 HzFemales: 140-400

(men have more dense and longer vocal folds)

Singing voices (especially the higher harmonics) extend the

range into the kilohertz region.

Page 6: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

English Vowels

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formants

Formants:

A range of frequencies that are enhanced.

The shape of the envelope determines what vowel you hear!

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We can model the vocal cavity as a 17cm long conical tube closed at

one end (the vocal fold end). Hence the harmonics expected

would be fn=n v/4(.17) = 1, 2, 3 kHz, etc.The Q is very low due to the

softness of the cavity tissue, so the resonances are rather broad.

Page 9: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

Different shapes create different formant frequencies

Page 10: L 17 The Human Voice. The Vocal Tract epiglottis.

Vocal Formants

“had”

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Pure 250 Hz source (with lots of harmonics)

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

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send that 250 Hz sound (with lots of harmonics) through the cone:

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

"Formant"

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send that 500 Hz sound (with lots of harmonics) through the cone:

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

SAME Formant

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Formant frequencies determine vowel sounds

demo with Raven Lite…

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What is the frequency of the note?

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

a) 2 kHzb) 3.1 kHzc) 1.0 kHzd) 250 Hz

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What is the frequency of first formant?

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

a) 2 kHzb) 3.1 kHzc) 1.0 kHzd) 250 Hz

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If I sing a higher note….

1 kHz 2 kHz 3 kHz

a) the pitch and the formants go upb) the formants go up but the pitch stays the samec) the pitch goes up but the formants stay the same

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Operatic Tenor & Orchestra

Acoustic power informants allowoperatic singer tobe heard overorchestra.

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CT 8.3.2

Musicians refer to tremolo when the loudness fluctuates while the pitch remains unchanged. Is this an example of…

A: Frequency modulation.

B: Amplitude modulation.

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CT 8.3.2b

Musicians refer to vibrato when the pitch is wiggled up and down as you sing. Is this an example of… A: Frequency modulation.B: Amplitude modulation.

Violinists can make “excursions”From concert A of .2 semitones, 6 times/sec.

6 Hz -> “signal frequency”440 Hz -> “carrier frequency” 0.2 semitones-> strength of the modulation

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