Breathing patterns during spontaneous speech.

Lung volumes, speech intensity, the linguistic location of inspirations, and the variability of each, were studied during spontaneous speech in 6 healthy young women over 7 to 10 sessions each, using respiratory inductance plethysmography. Although average lung volume levels were within the vital capacity range previously reported for speech (Hixon, Goldman, & Mead, 1973), significant inter- and intrasubject variability was observed. This variability was considerable for some subjects (average initiation lung volume varying between 42 and 63% VC over the sessions) and relatively small for others (between 47 and 53% VC). Some of the lung volume variation was associated with changes in mood state, examined by self-report questionnaire at each measurement occasion. Linguistic factors were important influences in the lung volume variation. The majority of breaths in the conversations and monologues preceded structural (clause) boundaries. The volume of air inspired preutterance was found to be linked to the length of the ensuing breath group in each of our 6 subjects, as longer breath groups, spanning up to seven clauses in the spontaneous speech, were anticipated by inspiring to a higher lung volume. The subjects used a comfortable speaking intensity range, which varied for different individuals and sessions over 4 to 18 dB. Increases in speech intensity within individual ranges were not associated with increased lung volumes. The data provide novel insight into associations between physiological and linguistic factors in the control of speech breathing, and are suggestive of the existence of neural planning of the respiratory system, in anticipation of the demands of the utterance.

[1]  A. W. Siegman,et al.  Voices of fear and anxiety and sadness and depression: the effects of speech rate and loudness on fear and anxiety and sadness and depression. , 1993, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[2]  D. White,et al.  Sexual influence on the control of breathing. , 1983, Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology.

[3]  S. Svebak,et al.  Respiratory patterns as predictors of laughter. , 1975, Psychophysiology.

[4]  R. Millman,et al.  Importance of breath size in calibrating the respiratory inductive plethysmograph. , 1986, Chest.

[5]  T J Hixon,et al.  Speech breathing in women. , 1989, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[6]  M. Sackner,et al.  Validation of respiratory inductive plethysmography using different calibration procedures. , 2015, The American review of respiratory disease.

[7]  K E Paige,et al.  Effects of Oral Contraceptives on Affective Fluctuations Associated with the Menstrual Cycle , 1971, Psychosomatic medicine.

[8]  J. Wilding,et al.  Performance and state changes during the menstrual cycle, conceptualised within a broad band testing framework. , 1991, Social science & medicine.

[9]  D. Rekart,et al.  Acoustic characteristics of reticent speech , 1989 .

[10]  G A Smith Voice analysis for the measurement of anxiety. , 1977, The British journal of medical psychology.

[11]  R. Bandler,et al.  Pulmonary and upper airway afferent influences on the motor pattern of vocalization evoked by excitation of the midbrain periaqueductal gray of the cat , 1993, Brain Research.

[12]  J. Abbs,et al.  Labial-Mandibular Coordination in the Production of Speech: Implications for the Operation of Motor Equivalence , 1976, Phonetica.

[13]  R. J. Baken,et al.  Influence of lung volume on the airflow-intensity relationship. , 1984, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[14]  John Everard Cotes,et al.  Handbook of Pulmonary Drug Therapy , 1993, Thorax.

[15]  T. Hixon,et al.  Respiratory kinematics in female classical singers , 1990 .

[16]  P. Suter,et al.  Noninvasive ventilatory monitoring with bellows pneumographs in supine subjects. , 1983, Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology.

[17]  J. Sharp,et al.  Relative contributions of rib cage and abdomen to breathing in normal subjects , 1975 .

[18]  F. Goldman-Eisler,et al.  Speech-breathing activity--a measure of tension and affect during interviews. , 1955, British journal of psychology.

[19]  Shenmin Zhang,et al.  Brain stem integration of vocalization: role of the midbrain periaqueductal gray. , 1994, Journal of neurophysiology.

[20]  C. Kimble,et al.  Nonverbal concomitants of enacted emotional intensity and positivity: Visual and vocal behavior1 , 1981 .

[21]  H. Lyons Centrally acting hormones and respiration. , 1976, Pharmacology & therapeutics. Part B: General & systematic pharmacology.

[22]  M. Hodge,et al.  Characteristics of speech breathing in young women. , 1989, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[23]  R. Loudon,et al.  Volumes and breathing patterns during speech in healthy and asthmatic subjects. , 1988, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[24]  S. Bloch,et al.  Specific respiratory patterns distinguish among human basic emotions. , 1991, International journal of psychophysiology : official journal of the International Organization of Psychophysiology.

[25]  D. Whitteridge,et al.  Respiratory muscles in speech. , 1959, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[26]  C. Sapienza,et al.  Respiratory and laryngeal function of women and men during vocal intensity variation. , 1993, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[27]  T. Zahn,et al.  Changes in mood and autonomic functioning during the menstrual cycle. , 1974, Psychophysiology.

[28]  E. Stathopoulos,et al.  Lung volume changes in children and adults during speech production. , 1988, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[29]  A. Winkworth,et al.  Variability and consistency in speech breathing during reading: lung volumes, speech intensity, and linguistic factors. , 1994, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[30]  J. Fodor,et al.  The Psychology of Language: An Introduction to Psycholinguistics and Generative Grammar , 1976 .

[31]  J. Mead,et al.  Kinetic aspects of singing. , 1966, Journal of applied physiology.

[32]  T. Hixon,et al.  Kinematics of the chest wall during speech production: volume displacements of the rib cage, abdomen, and lung. , 1973, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[33]  I. Hickie,et al.  Impaired voluntary drive to breathe: a possible link between depression and unexplained ventilatory failure in asthmatic patients. , 1994, Thorax.

[34]  D. Pierson,et al.  Respiratory drives and exercise in menstrual cycles of athletic and nonathletic women. , 1981, Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology.

[35]  T J Hixon,et al.  Respiratory kinematics in classical (opera) singers. , 1985, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[36]  T. Hixon,et al.  Age and speech breathing. , 1987, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[37]  R. Cox Sport psychology : concepts and applications , 1990 .

[38]  W. Suess,et al.  The effects of psychological stress on respiration: a preliminary study of anxiety and hyperventilation. , 1980, Psychophysiology.

[39]  T. Hixon,et al.  Relative volume changes of the rib cage and abdomen during prephonatory chest wall posturing , 1988 .

[40]  T. Hixon,et al.  Body type and speech breathing. , 1986, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[41]  T. Hixon,et al.  To breathe or not to breathe-That is the question: An investigation of speech breathing kinematics in world class Shakespearean actors , 1987 .

[42]  T. Hixon,et al.  Speech breathing in children and adolescents. , 1990, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[43]  J. Mead,et al.  Measurement of the separate volume changes of rib cage and abdomen during breathing. , 1967, Journal of applied physiology.

[44]  Gordon G. Globus,et al.  Emotion, breathing and speech , 1968 .

[45]  F. Goldman-Eisler The Distribution of Pause Durations in Speech , 1961 .

[46]  Daniel Jones An outline of English phonetics , 1956 .

[47]  Daniel C. O'Connell,et al.  Critical Essays on Language Use and Psychology , 1988 .

[48]  M. Gentil Variability of motor strategies , 1990, Brain and Language.

[49]  F. Goldman-Eisler,et al.  Temporal Patterns of Cognitive Activity and Breath Control in Speech , 1965, Language and speech.

[50]  E. Silverman Speech fluency fluctuations during the menstrual cycle. , 1975, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[51]  R. Klich,et al.  Speech breathing in senescent and younger women during oral reading. , 1992, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[52]  T J Hixon,et al.  Dynamics of the chest wall during speech production: function of the thorax, rib cage, diaphragm, and abdomen. , 1976, Journal of speech and hearing research.

[53]  J. Averill AUTONOMIC RESPONSE PATTERNS DURING SADNESS AND MIRTH , 1969 .

[54]  B Conrad,et al.  Speech respiration as an indicator of integrative contextual processing. , 1983, Folia phoniatrica.