An Euler-Bernoulli-Type Beam Model of the Vocal Folds for Describing Curved and Incomplete Glottal Closure Patterns
Mohamed A. Serry, Gabriel A. Alzamendi, Mat\'ias Za\~nartu, Sean D., Peterson

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel Euler-Bernoulli beam model of vocal folds that replicates incomplete glottal closure patterns, providing insights into the physical mechanisms underlying various laryngeal configurations during phonation.
Contribution
The study develops a composite beam model integrated with a laryngeal muscle activation framework, revealing how different muscle activations produce specific glottal closure patterns.
Findings
Co-activation of LCA and IA muscles causes posterior-only closure.
Activation of TA muscle results in anterior and mid-membranous closure.
Muscle activation patterns can produce hourglass-shaped glottal configurations.
Abstract
Incomplete glottal closure is a laryngeal configuration wherein the glottis is not fully obstructed prior to phonation. In this work, we introduce an Euler-Bernoulli composite beam vocal fold (VF) model that produces qualitatively similar incomplete glottal closure patterns as those observed in experimental and high-fidelity numerical studies, thus offering insights in to the potential underlying physical mechanisms. Refined physiological insights are pursued by incorporating the beam model into a VF posturing model that embeds the five intrinsic laryngeal muscles. Analysis of the combined model shows that co-activating the lateral cricoarytenoid (LCA) and interarytenoid (IA) muscles without activating the thyroarytenoid (TA) muscle results in a bowed (convex) VF geometry with closure at the posterior margin only; this is primarily attributed to the reactive moments at the anterior VF…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVoice and Speech Disorders · Phonetics and Phonology Research · Speech Recognition and Synthesis
