Electroglottographic wavegram
An electroglottographic wavegram is a tool for analyzing the voice source in speech and singing, based on electroglottographic signals.
Assessing the singing and speaking voice
The wavegram, invented by Christian T. Herbst, provides an intuitive means for quickly assessing vocal fold contact phenomena and their variation over time. Vocal fold closings and openings appear here as a sequence of events rather than single incidents, taking place over a certain period of time, and changing with pitch, loudness and register. Wavegrams document systematic phenomena, indicating subtle changes of the vocal fold oscillatory regime.Electroglottographic wavegrams are created in 5 steps :
- extraction of consecutive glottal cycles from the EGG signal;
- locally normalized data values are converted into monochrome color information, and are plotted as a strip representing one glottal cycle each;
- strips are rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise;
- Glottal cycle duration is normalized by scaling the individual glottal cycle plots to the same height;
- the resulting graphs are combined to form the final display, the EGG wavegram.
- the anatomical baseline of the individual;
- physiological and habitual muscular patterns in phonation, e.g. degree of vocal fold adduction, register in singing and speech;
- organic voice disorders, i.e. pathological deviations from the norm.
- screenings for voice disorders ;
- bio-feedback in voice pedagogy and education;
- voice therapy ;
- conservative and post-operative treatment of organic voice disorders;
- voice recognition in forensics.
The idea of wavegrams can be extended to displaying other data, such as acoustic signals or high-speed video endoscopic recordings of the vibrating vocal folds.