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pan european voice conference 2009

Overview Session Overview Sessionprint print
Free paper session: Laryngeal visualization and imaging
1 Clinical examination of vocal fold vibrations by modern imaging technique: phonovibrography and its applications
Ulrich Eysholdt 1 , Michael Doellinger 1 , Joerg Lohscheller 1
1 University Hospital, Dept. Phoniatrics, Erlangen

The source of voice sound is the vibration of the vocal folds. In case of any voice disorder the examination of the sound source is mandatory. While the most wide-spread stroboscopy is very useful in normal or near-normal voice, i.e. harmonic, periodic vibrations, it fails more and more with increasing vibration pathology. High speed recordings (HSR) are able to visualize irregular vibrations with real time resolution. However, due to expenditure of time HSR are difficult to handle in a clinical environment. Even when replayed at slow motion high speed recordings are less suggestive for the examiner, as motion is less obvious to human perception than static object features are. Under the name phonovibrogram (PVG) we developed an image processing procedure to make HSR clinically more applicable. The PVG concentrates the motion of a complete recording into one single image at the cost of loss of the direct anatomical information. PVG shows a remarkable discriminatory power in voice pathology. It works like a fingerprint of the vibration and - at the first time - allows to automatically classify irregular vibrations with very high reliability from endoscopic HSR.


2 Videokymographic Frames Extraction and Analysis from Full Video Recording
Leonardo Bocchi 1 , Marcello Calisti 1 , Claudia Manfredi 1 , Lorenzo Mirabile 2 , Giorgio Peretti 3
1 Università degli Studi di Firenze, Electronics and Telecommunications, Firenze
2 Children Hospital A. Meyer, , Firenze
3 Spedali Civili, , Brescia

Videokymography (VKG) is a recently developed but emerging imaging technique for high speed visualisation of vocal folds vibration (8000 frames/s). Thanks to its high-resolution and low-cost characteristics, it has gained more and more interest in the clinical field, especially in case of irregular movement of the vocal folds. This growing interest has motivated efforts in the development of specific imaging techniques, capable to extract relevant objective information from VKG recordings, such as time and amplitude measures of asymmetry of vibration.

Recently, a new VKG device has been developed, with improved image quality with respect to the previous ones, that allows the visualisation of an uninterrupted VKG strip instead of a sequence of images of very short duration (15-20 ms) separated by black rows. Moreover, the new device is suitable for usage also on a flexible endoscope, thus allowing performing VKG exams on a wider range of patients, children included.

The aim of this work is to present a new tool (named VKG-Analyser) devoted to VKG image analysis, which has been provided with a user-friendly interface that makes VKG-Analyser usable also by non-experts in the daily routine. The tool has been developed in strict co-operation with clinicians that routinely use videokymography in the hospital. Its flexible structure allows for images retrieval and analysis, and storage of results in a very simple way.

A new feature consist in an automatic selection of VKG frames from the whole recording, based on Fast Fourier Transforming (FFT) each column of the frames, to point out those frames that contain any periodicity. The procedure gives a "spectral map" that allows for selecting the VKG frames from the whole sequence. This greatly speeds up the whole computational time.

Due to possible strong irregularities of pathological vocal cycles, the analysis of videokimograms presented significant challenges for computer analysis. By applying robust contour detection algorithms, suitably modified to deal with VKG images, first reliable results have been obtained and tested on simulated images. The underlying image analysis techniques require low computer time, allowing for an almost real-time analysis and tracking relevant parameters.

Experiments have been performed both with rigid and flexible endoscopes. Specifically, flexible endoscope has been used at the Children Hospital A. Meyer, in Firenze, Italy, even on 1-2 years old children. Though its optimal usage requires a suitable training period, first results are promising.


3 Assessing functional properties of the vocal fold vibration by means of fourier analysis – a comparison of findings with high-speed videolaryngoscopy and laryngostroboscopy in the normophonic, impaired and professional voice
Thomas Woellner 1 , Andreas Krenmayr 2 , Nicola Supper 1 , Patrick Zorowka 1
1 Medical University Innsbruck, Clinic for Hearing, Voice and Speech Disorders, Innsbruck
2 University of Innsbruck, C. Doppler Laboratory for Active Implantable Systems, Institute of Ion Physics and Applied Physics, Innsbruck