Laryngeal Cartilages
Laryngeal Muscles
Innervation
Pot Pourri
There's a Word for That
100

The tube that is immediately posterior to the trachea.

What is the esophagus?

100

I am a dome-shaped, muscular, and membranous structure that is the primary muscle for inhalation.

What is the diaphragm?

100

I am cranial nerve #10.

What is the Vagus?

100

The pressure that builds up under adducted vocal folds before phonating.

What is subglottic pressure?

100

The study of the function of muscles and structure of the human body is . . . 

What is physiology?

200

The only cartilage that contains elastic cartilage and is leaf-shaped.

What is the epiglottis?

200

What is the muscular ring located at the junction of the pharynx and the esophagus and act like a valve during swallowing.

What is the Upper Esophageal Sphincter (UES).

200

The movement of the VFs when inhaling is called . . .

What is abduction?

200

The pressure that builds up above the glottis that influences loudness, pitch and spectral shape.

What is supraglottic pressure?

200

This is a primary component of Mr. Krupke's voice research and involves directing the sound and vibrations to the front of the mouth and face.

What is forward focus?

300

The largest cartilage in the larynx. Sometimes I can be seen in the front of someone's neck.

What is the thyroid cartilage?

300

The muscle that connects the thyroid cartilage and the cricoid cartilage.

What is the cricothyroid muscle?

300

The movement of the VFs called when phonating is called . . . 

What is adduction?

300

The primary function of the epiglottis.

What is to protect the airway?

300

SOVT stands for ...

What is semi-occluded vocal tract?

400

We are small pyramidal-shaped cartilages and are the primary controllers of VF position and tension.

What are the arytenoid cartilages?

400

I am the only muscle capable of actively opening the vocal folds.

What is the PCA (posterior cricoarytenoid?

400

The laryngeal nerve that supplies motor fibers to most of the intrinsic muscles of the larynx is called . . . 

What is the Superior Laryngeal Nerve?

400

The structure above the larynx that is part of the vocal tract.

What is the pharynx?

400

I am an acoustic model that explains how the human voice produces sound and how this sound is shaped into speech.

What is the Source-Theory Model?

500

The only cartilage that forms a complete ring.

What is the cricoid cartilage?

500

I am the muscle mass that forms the bulk of a vocal fold.

What is the vocalis muscle?

500

I supply fibers for sensory and motor control for the upper larynx.

The Superior Laryngeal Nerve?

500

There are 3 types of breathing. Name them.

What are clavicular, thoracic and abdominal/diaphragmatic?

500

During each cycle of phonation, air rushes between the VFs, creating negative pressure, which causes an inward pull that brings them back together.

What is the Bernoulli Effect?