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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.38 289-303 April 1995.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Time-Frequency Analyses of Thyroarytenoid Myoelectric Activity in Normal and Spasmodic Dysphonia Subjects

Rick M. Roark 1
Eric M. Dowling 2
Ronald D. DeGroat 2
Ben C. Watson 1

Steven D. Schaefer 1

1 Department of Otolaryngology New York Medical College Valhalla and New York Eye & Ear Infirmary Manhattan
2 Department of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science University of Texas at Dallas Richardson

roark{at}nymc.edu

Digital recordings of thyroarytenoid (TA) myoelectric activity (via percutaneous hooked-wire electrodes) were obtained for 10 normal control subjects and 10 subjects with spasmodic dysphonia during performance of five tasks of varying complexity: quiet breathing, Valsalva maneuver, whispered /i/, voiced /i/, and "beep beep went the heap." Time-frequency power spectral density functions, PSD(f, t), were determined for a selected segment of the signals, and measures of median frequency, mean frequency, bandwidth, and center frequency of PSD(f, t) were derived for each sample point. Statistical median, mean, standard deviation, minimum, maximum, and mode of the power spectral density measures were computed to compose feature vectors for each TA myoelectric recording. Statistical pattern recognition procedures using maximum likelihood classification tests were applied to the feature space to discriminate disordered from normal speakers for each task. Findings indicate a high level of discriminability between subject groups for phonated speaking tasks in contrast to low levels of discriminability for whispered and nonspeech tasks. Graphical presentations of three-dimensional PSD(f, t) plots are given that illustrate changes in spectral characteristics of TA EMG at the onset of laryngospasm.

KEY WORDS: time-frequency analysis, EMG, spasmodic dysphonia, spectral analysis, classification

Submitted on April 20, 1994
Accepted on October 3, 1994


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