53 research outputs found

    The Effect of Experience on Response Time When Judging Synthesized Voice Quality

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    Objectives/hypothesis The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of level and type of experience on response time and the number of replays needed when judging voice quality. Study design This was a within-subjects group design. Methods Speech-language pathologists, singing voice teachers, speech-language pathology graduate students with and without experience with a voice client, graduate students who have completed a voice pedagogy course, and inexperienced listeners (n = 60) rated stimuli with systematically altered measurements of jitter, shimmer, and noise-to-harmonics ratio (NHR) on a visual analog scale ranging from mild to severe for overall severity, roughness, breathiness, strain, and pitch. Response time (in seconds) and number of replays were recorded during the experiment. Results Results showed that experienced listeners took the most time when rating the stimuli. Stimuli with two altered acoustical components also yielded longer response times compared with the stimuli with one altered acoustical component. Finally, level and type of experience had some effect on the number of replays for each stimulus during the rating task. Conclusions In conclusion, experience does affect response time when judging voice quality and the number of replays during voice quality rating tasks. Continued research is needed regarding the reasons for extended time and replays as per experience so as to enhance future training protocols

    Physical Education and Outdoor Adventure

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    The Role of Leisure

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    Autogenous flexor-tendon grafts. A biomechanical and morphological study in dogs

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    Intrasynovial and extrasynovial donor autogenous flexor-tendon grafts were placed in the synovial sheaths of the medial and lateral digits of the forepaw in twenty dogs (forty tendons). Postoperatively, the dogs were managed with early, controlled, passive mobilization. Histological and ultrastructural evaluations were carried out at ten days, three weeks, and six weeks, and biomechanical analyses were performed at three and six weeks. The intrasynovial and extrasynovial tendon grafts showed different healing processes histologically. The extrasynovial tendon grafts healed with early ingrowth of peripheral adhesions, which appeared to become larger and more dense over time. These grafts exhibited decreased cellularity and early neovascularization at ten days, and there was evidence of progressive revascularization and cellular repopulation at three and six weeks. In contrast, the intrasynovial tendon grafts demonstrated minimum adhesions, and both cellularity and collagen organization were normal at each time-interval. The intrasynovial grafts had significantly more angular rotation at the proximal interphalangeal joint at three and six weeks than did the extrasynovial grafts (p < 0.05)
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