Anatomy
Oral and Velo
Speech Acoustics & Analysis
Speech Perception
Neural
200

VP sphincter compression is greater for (low or high) vowels

What are high vowels? 

200

This is the largest laryngeal cartilage

What is the Thyroid Cartilage? 

200

Peaks in the output spectrum are called these.

What are Formants? 

200

The perception theory requiring a special speech-decoding mechanism is this one

What is the Motor theory? 

200

This lobe is responsible for executive functions like planning and decision-making that support organized communication.

What is the frontal lobe? 

400

This intrinsic muscle is a key adductor of the vocal folds.

What is the LCA (lateral cricoarytenoid)?

400

The larynx has two pairs of joints: the _________ and the cricoarytenoid joints.

What are the cricothyroid joints?

400

Consonants like stops, fricatives, and affricates belong to this broad class characterized by a constriction that creates obstruction.

What are Obstruents? 

400

Lexical access uses both of these processing directions.

What are top-down and bottom-up? 

400

This lobe is linked to object recognition, sensory integration, and body awareness. 

What is the Parietal Lobe? 

600

The pharynx has this many “core” muscles.

What is 6? 

600

The vocal folds are approximately this size

What is a thumbnail? 

600

Increasing tongue height tends to decrease this formant

What is F1? 

600

In acoustic vowel theory, the sound source is generated here before it is shaped by the filter. 

What are the vocal folds? 

600

In neuroanatomy basics, these are defined as clusters of cell bodies deep within the cerebral hemispheres.

What are the subcortical nuclei? 

800

Three of the pharyngeal muscles are the superior, middle, and inferior of this group

What are constrictors? 

800

In a set of “nasal dilator options,” this muscle is often the “odd one out” because it isn’t literally named “nasal dilator,” though it can help flare the nostril.

What is the levator labii superioris alaeque nasi?

800

Tongue fronting/advancement tends to increase this formant

What is F2?

800

Motor Theory was motivated by the idea that this makes stable acoustic “invariants” hard to rely on.

What is Acoustic Variability? 

800

This is the anatomical site where information is transferred between neurons.

What is a Synapse? 

1000

The oropharynx has an approximate forward bend of about this angle.

What is 90 degrees? 

1000

Outer nose movements are involved in breathing events and this second function.

What is emotional signaling?

1000

This movement tends to lower all formant frequencies

What is lip-rounding? 

1000

A common way to demonstrate categorical perception is with a continuum that manipulates this stop-consonant timing variable.

What is VOT (voice onset time)? 

1000

This brain lobe is primarily responsible for auditory processing and is strongly associated with language comprehension (classically Wernicke’s area).

What is the Temporal Lobe? 

2000

This is the typical movement path of the velum.

What is up-and-back, down-and-forward?

2000

When oral and nasal resonators are coupled, the spectrum can show these spectral “dips.”

What are antiresonances? 

2000

This measure requires F2 onset and F2 target.

What is a locus equation? 

2000

 This is the name for the way neighboring sounds influence what we hear

What is Coarticulation? 

2000

These are the three major tracts that connect the cerebellum to the central nervous system.

What are the cerebellar peduncles?

2200

The larynx has two pairs of joints: the _________ and the cricoarytenoid joints.

What are the cricothyroid joints?

2200

A nasal vowel spectrum contains resonances from both the oral cavity and this other cavity system.

What are nasal cavities? 

2200

If the tongue is sealed airtight to the hard palate, airway resistance is this value.

What is infinite? 

2200

In the source–filter model, this part of the system shapes the resonances that we observe as formants.

What is the Vocal Tract? 

2200

This theory explains how a constriction’s location changes formant frequencies by altering pressure and airflow (velocity) distributions in the vocal-tract “tube.”

What is Perturbation Theory?

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