Effect of Facemask Use on Respiratory Patterns of Women in Speech and Singing

Contact author: Sally Collyer, who is now at Suite 2, 17 Carrington Road, Box Hill Victoria 3128, Australia Email: sallycollyer{at}yahoo.com.au PURPOSE: Research into respiratory behavior during singing and speech makes extensive use of standard respiratory and vented pneumotachograph facemasks. Thi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of speech, language, and hearing research language, and hearing research, 2006-04, Vol.49 (2), p.412-423
Hauptverfasser: Collyer, Sally, Davis, Pamela J
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container_title Journal of speech, language, and hearing research
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Davis, Pamela J
description Contact author: Sally Collyer, who is now at Suite 2, 17 Carrington Road, Box Hill Victoria 3128, Australia Email: sallycollyer{at}yahoo.com.au PURPOSE: Research into respiratory behavior during singing and speech makes extensive use of standard respiratory and vented pneumotachograph facemasks. This study investigated whether the use of such facemasks would affect respiratory behavior in terms of lung volume (excursion, at initiation and at termination) or duration (of inspiration and of expiration) during speech or singing. METHOD: The respiratory patterns of 6 females were recorded using uniaxial surface magnetometry during 4 tasks: quiet breathing, a /pa/ syllabic train, reading ("The Rainbow Passage"), and singing a Christmas carol ("Silent night"). Each task was performed in 4 facemask conditions: wearing no facemask, wearing a facemask rim only, wearing a standard respiratory facemask, and wearing a vented pneumotachograph facemask. RESULTS: No significant effect was found for any of the facemask conditions on lung volume or duration measures during any tasks. CONCLUSION: The results confirm earlier studies that the vented pneumotachograph facemask does not affect breathing behavior in speech research studies and extends the finding to the study of breathing behavior in singing and to the use of a standard respiratory facemask. KEY WORDS: facemasks, breathing, speech, singing CiteULike     Connotea     Del.icio.us     Digg     Facebook     Reddit     Technorati     Twitter     What's this?
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This study investigated whether the use of such facemasks would affect respiratory behavior in terms of lung volume (excursion, at initiation and at termination) or duration (of inspiration and of expiration) during speech or singing. METHOD: The respiratory patterns of 6 females were recorded using uniaxial surface magnetometry during 4 tasks: quiet breathing, a /pa/ syllabic train, reading ("The Rainbow Passage"), and singing a Christmas carol ("Silent night"). Each task was performed in 4 facemask conditions: wearing no facemask, wearing a facemask rim only, wearing a standard respiratory facemask, and wearing a vented pneumotachograph facemask. RESULTS: No significant effect was found for any of the facemask conditions on lung volume or duration measures during any tasks. CONCLUSION: The results confirm earlier studies that the vented pneumotachograph facemask does not affect breathing behavior in speech research studies and extends the finding to the study of breathing behavior in singing and to the use of a standard respiratory facemask. 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This study investigated whether the use of such facemasks would affect respiratory behavior in terms of lung volume (excursion, at initiation and at termination) or duration (of inspiration and of expiration) during speech or singing. METHOD: The respiratory patterns of 6 females were recorded using uniaxial surface magnetometry during 4 tasks: quiet breathing, a /pa/ syllabic train, reading ("The Rainbow Passage"), and singing a Christmas carol ("Silent night"). Each task was performed in 4 facemask conditions: wearing no facemask, wearing a facemask rim only, wearing a standard respiratory facemask, and wearing a vented pneumotachograph facemask. RESULTS: No significant effect was found for any of the facemask conditions on lung volume or duration measures during any tasks. CONCLUSION: The results confirm earlier studies that the vented pneumotachograph facemask does not affect breathing behavior in speech research studies and extends the finding to the study of breathing behavior in singing and to the use of a standard respiratory facemask. 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This study investigated whether the use of such facemasks would affect respiratory behavior in terms of lung volume (excursion, at initiation and at termination) or duration (of inspiration and of expiration) during speech or singing. METHOD: The respiratory patterns of 6 females were recorded using uniaxial surface magnetometry during 4 tasks: quiet breathing, a /pa/ syllabic train, reading ("The Rainbow Passage"), and singing a Christmas carol ("Silent night"). Each task was performed in 4 facemask conditions: wearing no facemask, wearing a facemask rim only, wearing a standard respiratory facemask, and wearing a vented pneumotachograph facemask. RESULTS: No significant effect was found for any of the facemask conditions on lung volume or duration measures during any tasks. CONCLUSION: The results confirm earlier studies that the vented pneumotachograph facemask does not affect breathing behavior in speech research studies and extends the finding to the study of breathing behavior in singing and to the use of a standard respiratory facemask. KEY WORDS: facemasks, breathing, speech, singing CiteULike     Connotea     Del.icio.us     Digg     Facebook     Reddit     Technorati     Twitter     What's this?</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>ASHA</pub><pmid>16671853</pmid><doi>10.1044/1092-4388(2006/032)</doi><tpages>12</tpages></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
Adults
Articulation Impairments
Audio Equipment
Communication Research
Data Analysis
Devices
English
Female
Females
Forced Expiratory Volume
Humans
Lung Volume Measurements
Masks
Masks - adverse effects
Measurement
Measurement Techniques
Middle Aged
Music
North American English
Nursery Rhymes
Phonation - physiology
Physiological aspects
Protective clothing
Respiration
Respiratory system
Rhyme
Singing
Sound Spectrography
Speech
Speech - physiology
Speech Communication
Speech production
Stimulation
Syllables
Task Performance and Analysis
Time Factors
Women
Young Children
title Effect of Facemask Use on Respiratory Patterns of Women in Speech and Singing
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