Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging

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Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging. / Köberlein, Marie; Birkholz, Peter; Burdumy, Michael; Richter, Bernhard; Burk, Fabian; Traser, Louisa; Echternach, Matthias.

In: J ACOUST SOC AM, Vol. 150, No. 6, 4191, 12.2021.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Köberlein, M, Birkholz, P, Burdumy, M, Richter, B, Burk, F, Traser, L & Echternach, M 2021, 'Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging', J ACOUST SOC AM, vol. 150, no. 6, 4191. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0008903

APA

Köberlein, M., Birkholz, P., Burdumy, M., Richter, B., Burk, F., Traser, L., & Echternach, M. (2021). Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging. J ACOUST SOC AM, 150(6), [4191]. https://doi.org/10.1121/10.0008903

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{943ac80844a440e98725962cbf021764,
title = "Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging",
abstract = "Resonance-strategies with respect to vocal registers, i.e., frequency-ranges of uniform, demarcated voice quality, for the highest part of the female voice are still not completely understood. The first and second vocal tract resonances usually determine vowels. If the fundamental frequency exceeds the vowel-shaping resonance frequencies of speech, vocal tract resonances are tuned to voice source partials. It has not yet been clarified if such tuning is applicable for the entire voice-range, particularly for the top pitches. We investigated professional sopranos who regularly sing pitches above C6 (1047 Hz). Dynamic three-dimensional (3D) magnetic resonance imaging was used to calculate resonances for pitches from C5 (523 Hz) to C7 (2093 Hz) with different vowel configurations ([a:], [i:], [u:]), and different contexts (scales or octave jumps). A spectral analysis and an acoustic analysis of 3D-printed vocal tract models were conducted. The results suggest that there is no exclusive register-defining resonance-strategy. The intersection of fundamental frequency and first vocal tract resonance was not found to necessarily indicate a register shift. The articulators and the vocal tract resonances were either kept without significant adjustments, or the fR1:fo-tuning, wherein the first vocal tract resonance enhances the fundamental frequency, was applied until F6 (1396 Hz). An fR2:fo-tuning was not observed.",
author = "Marie K{\"o}berlein and Peter Birkholz and Michael Burdumy and Bernhard Richter and Fabian Burk and Louisa Traser and Matthias Echternach",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1121/10.0008903",
language = "English",
volume = "150",
journal = "J ACOUST SOC AM",
issn = "0001-4966",
publisher = "Acoustical Society of America",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigation of resonance strategies of high pitch singing sopranos using dynamic three-dimensional magnetic resonance imaging

AU - Köberlein, Marie

AU - Birkholz, Peter

AU - Burdumy, Michael

AU - Richter, Bernhard

AU - Burk, Fabian

AU - Traser, Louisa

AU - Echternach, Matthias

PY - 2021/12

Y1 - 2021/12

N2 - Resonance-strategies with respect to vocal registers, i.e., frequency-ranges of uniform, demarcated voice quality, for the highest part of the female voice are still not completely understood. The first and second vocal tract resonances usually determine vowels. If the fundamental frequency exceeds the vowel-shaping resonance frequencies of speech, vocal tract resonances are tuned to voice source partials. It has not yet been clarified if such tuning is applicable for the entire voice-range, particularly for the top pitches. We investigated professional sopranos who regularly sing pitches above C6 (1047 Hz). Dynamic three-dimensional (3D) magnetic resonance imaging was used to calculate resonances for pitches from C5 (523 Hz) to C7 (2093 Hz) with different vowel configurations ([a:], [i:], [u:]), and different contexts (scales or octave jumps). A spectral analysis and an acoustic analysis of 3D-printed vocal tract models were conducted. The results suggest that there is no exclusive register-defining resonance-strategy. The intersection of fundamental frequency and first vocal tract resonance was not found to necessarily indicate a register shift. The articulators and the vocal tract resonances were either kept without significant adjustments, or the fR1:fo-tuning, wherein the first vocal tract resonance enhances the fundamental frequency, was applied until F6 (1396 Hz). An fR2:fo-tuning was not observed.

AB - Resonance-strategies with respect to vocal registers, i.e., frequency-ranges of uniform, demarcated voice quality, for the highest part of the female voice are still not completely understood. The first and second vocal tract resonances usually determine vowels. If the fundamental frequency exceeds the vowel-shaping resonance frequencies of speech, vocal tract resonances are tuned to voice source partials. It has not yet been clarified if such tuning is applicable for the entire voice-range, particularly for the top pitches. We investigated professional sopranos who regularly sing pitches above C6 (1047 Hz). Dynamic three-dimensional (3D) magnetic resonance imaging was used to calculate resonances for pitches from C5 (523 Hz) to C7 (2093 Hz) with different vowel configurations ([a:], [i:], [u:]), and different contexts (scales or octave jumps). A spectral analysis and an acoustic analysis of 3D-printed vocal tract models were conducted. The results suggest that there is no exclusive register-defining resonance-strategy. The intersection of fundamental frequency and first vocal tract resonance was not found to necessarily indicate a register shift. The articulators and the vocal tract resonances were either kept without significant adjustments, or the fR1:fo-tuning, wherein the first vocal tract resonance enhances the fundamental frequency, was applied until F6 (1396 Hz). An fR2:fo-tuning was not observed.

U2 - 10.1121/10.0008903

DO - 10.1121/10.0008903

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 34972262

VL - 150

JO - J ACOUST SOC AM

JF - J ACOUST SOC AM

SN - 0001-4966

IS - 6

M1 - 4191

ER -