Acoustic Voice Quality Index as a Potential Tool for Voice Screening

To diminish the risk of voice disorders in people who are highly dependent on their voices, such as teachers, vocal screening is important already at the beginning of such individuals’ professional studies. A reliable, specified screening tool is needed. The Acoustic Voice Quality Index (AVQI) has b...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of voice 2021-03, Vol.35 (2), p.226-232
Hauptverfasser: Faham, Maryam, Laukkanen, Anne-Maria, Ikävalko, Tero, Rantala, Leena, Geneid, Ahmed, Holmqvist-Jämsén, Sofia, Ruusuvirta, Kaarina, Pirilä, Sirpa
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To diminish the risk of voice disorders in people who are highly dependent on their voices, such as teachers, vocal screening is important already at the beginning of such individuals’ professional studies. A reliable, specified screening tool is needed. The Acoustic Voice Quality Index (AVQI) has been found to differentiate normal voices from abnormal voices and to serve as a treatment outcome measure. This study investigated whether AVQI could be a screening tool in combination with auditory- and self-perception of the voice to discriminate normal from slightly poor voices. Experimental. Some 128 female teaching students (mean age 26.39 years, SD 9.80 years) with no diagnosed voice disorders participated in this study. They read aloud a text in Finnish, sustained the vowel /a:/, and filled the Voice Handicap Index (VHI) questionnaire. Voice samples were recorded with an AKG C544L headset microphone, iFocusrite soundcard, and Praat software using a 44100 sample rate and 16-bit amplitude quantization. Five expert voice therapists evaluated the samples to determine the grade of dysphonia (G) using a scale of 0–0.5 (=normal), 0.5–1 (=mild), 1–2 (=moderate), and 2–3 (=severe). Three medial seconds of [a:] and the first 31 syllables of the text were analyzed using AVQI script version 03.01 in Praat (5.3.55). The analysis gives one AVQI score per participant (scale 0–10). The AVQI threshold of normal and disordered voices for Finnish speakers is 1.83; a Gmean = 0.0–0.5 and VHI score
ISSN:0892-1997
1873-4588
DOI:10.1016/j.jvoice.2019.08.017