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The Relationship Between VHI Scores and Specific Acoustic Measures of Mildly Disordered Voice Production
Authors:Karen M. Wheeler   Savita P. Collins  Christine M. Sapienza
Affiliation:Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, University of Florida, Gainesville 32611-7420, USA. wheeler@csd.ufl.edu
Abstract:This study was designed to examine the relationship between the Voice Handicap Index (VHI) and acoustic measures of voice samples common in clinical practice. Fifty participants, 38 women and 12 men, ranging in age from 19 to 80 years, with a mean age of 49 years, served as participants. Of these 50 participants, 17 participants could be included in the acoustic analysis of voice based on measures of error calculated with the TF32 software. All participants completed the VHI and provided voice samples including three trials of the sustained vowel /A/ at a comfortable loudness level as well as a connected speech sample consisting of the Zoo Passage. Acoustic measures were made with TF32 and Cool Edit software and included fundamental frequency, jitter %, shimmer %, signal-to-noise ratio, mean root-mean-square intensity, fundamental frequency standard deviation, aphonic periods, and breath groups. Results indicate that these measures were not predictive of overall VHI score, and no cohesive or predictable pattern was identified when comparing individual measures with overall VHI or with each subscale item. Likely contributions to this lack of correlation and subsequent clinical implications are discussed, as well as the direction for further research.
Keywords:Voice Handicap Index   Acoustic measures   Handicap   Voice disorders
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