Fletcher Neville H, Riede Tobias, Suthers Roderick A
Research School of Physical Sciences and Engineering, Australian National University, Canberra 0200, Australia.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2006 Feb;119(2):1005-11. doi: 10.1121/1.2159434.
Some birds make use of a distensible oral cavity to produce nearly pure-tone song. Songbirds such as the Northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis) have a muscularly distended oropharyngeal-esophageal cavity between the top of the trachea and the open beak. The present paper analyzes the acoustics of this vocal system. It is shown that the resonance of the oropharyngeal-esophageal cavity, vented through the beak, introduces a dominant peak in the radiation efficiency, the frequency of which can be adjusted by varying the volume of the cavity, the beak gape, and perhaps the position of the tongue in the mouth. To produce nearly pure-tone song, the bird adjusts the frequency of this peak to coincide with the fundamental of the syringeal oscillation. The present paper provides the acoustical analysis underlying this behavior.
一些鸟类利用可扩张的口腔来发出近乎纯音的歌声。诸如北美主红雀(Cardinalis cardinalis)这样的鸣禽在气管顶部和张开的喙之间有一个肌肉扩张的口咽 - 食管腔。本文分析了这个发声系统的声学特性。结果表明,通过喙排出气体的口咽 - 食管腔的共振在辐射效率中引入了一个主导峰值,其频率可以通过改变腔的容积、喙的张开程度以及也许舌头在口腔中的位置来调节。为了发出近乎纯音的歌声,鸟类会调整这个峰值的频率使其与鸣管振荡的基频一致。本文提供了这种行为背后的声学分析。