Pinczower Rachel, Oates Jennifer
Royal Children's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
J Voice. 2005 Sep;19(3):440-53. doi: 10.1016/j.jvoice.2004.07.002.
This study explored whether acoustic and perceptual features could distinguish comfortable from maximally projected acting voice. Thirteen professional male actors performed a passage from William Shakespeare's Julius Caesar twice. The first delivery used their comfortably projected voices, whereas the second used maximal projection. Acoustic measures, expert ratings, and self-ratings of projection and voice quality were investigated. Long-term average spectra (LTAS) and sound pressure level (SPL) analyses were conducted. Perceptual variables included projection, breathiness, roughness, and strain. When comparing the intensity difference between the higher (2-4 kHz) and lower (0-2 kHz) regions of the spectrum in voice samples from the maximal projected condition, LTAS analyses demonstrated increased acoustic energy in the higher part of the spectrum. This LTAS pattern was not as evident in the comfortable projected condition. These findings offered some preliminary support for the existence of an actor's formant (prominent peak in the upper part of the spectrum) during maximal projection.
本研究探讨了声学和感知特征能否区分舒适发声与最大投射发声。13名职业男性演员两次表演了威廉·莎士比亚的《尤利乌斯·恺撒》中的一段台词。第一次表演使用他们舒适的投射声音,而第二次使用最大投射。研究了声学测量、专家评分以及投射和嗓音质量的自我评分。进行了长期平均谱(LTAS)和声压级(SPL)分析。感知变量包括投射、呼吸声、粗糙度和紧张度。在比较最大投射条件下语音样本频谱较高区域(2 - 4千赫)和较低区域(0 - 2千赫)之间的强度差异时,LTAS分析表明频谱较高部分的声能增加。这种LTAS模式在舒适投射条件下不那么明显。这些发现为最大投射期间存在演员共振峰(频谱上部的突出峰值)提供了一些初步支持。