Articulation
Phonation
Respiration
Sound basics
Grab bag
100

The oral cavity, the nasal cavity and the pharyngeal cavity together form this.

What are the parts of the vocal tract?

100

This effect states that the pressure in a fluid decreases as velocity increases.

What is Bernoulli's effect?

100

This is the quiet inhalation and exhalation for getting air in and out of your lungs

What is tidal breathing?

100

frequency is the inverse of

What is a period?

100

Force over a given area is defined as :

What is pressure?

200

F1, F2 and F3 are known as......

What are formants?
200

The opening-open-closing-close phases of the vocal folds

What is a duty cycle?

200

This law states that with increasing volume, there is decrease in pressure

What is Boyle's law?

200

this type of waves has nodes and antinodes 

What is a standing wave?

200

This analysis determines the different sine waves make up the complex sound

What is fourier analysis?

300

In the source filter theory the vocal tract is..

What is the filter?

300

In this aspect of mucosal wave, the vocal folds open and close from bottom to the top

What is the vertical phase difference?

300

This dome shaped muscle contracts and moves downwards during inhalation

What is the diaphragm?

300

2F0, 3F0, 4F0...….

What are harmonics?

300

The maximum amount of air a person can exhale after inhaling as deeply as possible

What is vital capacity?

400

The f1 increases with the decreasing volume in this cavity

What is the pharyngeal cavity?

400

The minimum amount of pressure needed to put vocal folds into vibration

What is the phonatory threshold pressure?
400

Muscles use this characteristic to come back to their resting/typical position after contraction

What is elasticity?

400

Can be defined as number of cycles per unit of time

What is frequency?

400

Minute changes in intensity 

What is shimmer?

500

On spectrograms, the /m/, /n/, /ng/ sounds can be detected by this.

What is the nasal murmur?

500

The softest to the loudest sound a person can produce.

What is dynamic range?

500

We inhale for 10% of the time and do a controlled exhalation for 90% of the time to achieve:

What is speech breathing?

500

The central/natural frequency that an object responds to the most.

What is resonant frequency?

500

This is defined as the time between the release of the articulatory blockage to the
beginning of the VF vibration

What is voice onset time?

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