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1.
J Voice ; 2024 Apr 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38582724

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: This article provides a commentary on voice-related self-reports and presents various shortcomings endemic in the development and validation of these measures. Emphasis is placed on issues of construct validity, translation, and cross-cultural adaptation. Finally, a demonstration is provided to elucidate the importance of cross-cultural adaptation. METHODS: An example of a voice-related self-report that lacks cross-cultural adaptation is provided, and a linguistic translation and cross-cultural adaptation process is outlined and demonstrated. A bilingual voice scientist, a bilingual speech-language pathologist (SLP), and two experts in voice-related self-reports completed a multistep linguistic translation and cross-cultural adaptation process and obtained back-translations from five SLPs native to the self-report's source culture. RESULTS: Analyses of the back-translations demonstrated that the mean BiLingual Evaluation Understudy (BLEU) scores of the adapted items were higher overall than the back-translations of the original English items. CONCLUSIONS: Unvalidated translations of voice-related self-reports are commonly used as a baseline to further translate the measure, and this deteriorates cross-cultural health equity. Cross-cultural adaptation is a crucial, but often overlooked process when translating and adapting self-reports. The present article calls for standardized methodologies with an emphasis on the necessity of careful translation methods and cultural adaptation processes.

2.
J Voice ; 37(2): 298.e1-298.e9, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33526304

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Vocal fatigue (VF) is a primary vocal symptom experienced by professional voice users, such as teachers, whose voice is an occupational tool. The study determines the utilization of the Vocal Fatigue Index (VFI), a 19-item scale in identifying symptoms of VF and its severity in teachers. METHODS: Using responses of 695 teachers who completed the VFI, Mokken scaling was conducted on the items to identify the experiences of VF and its associated hierarchical nature of VF symptoms in teachers. Mokken scaling was completed on a total of four groups: (a) Total teachers group, (b) No VF group, (c) Low VF group, and (d) High VF group. RESULTS: Results revealed differences in item hierarchies between total teachers and across the separate groups of VF severity. Item hierarchy for teachers highlighted items from physical discomfort at the mild end of the hierarchy to items from symptom improvement with rest at the severe end of the hierarchy. Items related to avoidance presented as a separate scale for teachers presenting with high VF. DISCUSSION: Mokken scaling in teachers provides insight into the underlying complexity of the experience of VF symptoms and reliance on differential behavioral strategies in its management, suggesting the heterogenous nature of latent trait for VF in this specific population.


Asunto(s)
Personal Docente , Enfermedades Profesionales , Trastornos de la Voz , Voz , Humanos , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Trastornos de la Voz/diagnóstico , Índice de Severidad de la Enfermedad , Enfermedades Profesionales/diagnóstico
3.
J Voice ; 2022 Oct 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36229279

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Glottal fry is an increasingly prevalent voice type in young female speakers. The purpose of this study was to identify employers' perceptions toward young female speakers presenting with glottal fry and the impact on hirability. METHODS: Sixty employers responsible for hiring at their business in the Southeast region of the United States completed a survey developed to capture employers' perceptions toward young women using glottal fry. Employers listened to three voice samples of young women with varying levels of glottal fry and rated the voice on 14 semantic differential items. The semantic differential items were derived from the hiring constructs literature to capture perceptions related to mental capability, personality tendencies, and applied social skills. Additionally, questions related to hirability were captured at the end of the survey. RESULTS: Employers were able to identify continuous glottal fry compared to nonglottal fry voice samples. Employers rated voice samples with glottal fry more negatively (eg, less trustworthy, less competent, less educated) compared to nonglottal fry voice samples and were less likely to hire female speakers with continuous glottal fry. CONCLUSION: This study highlights the impact of negative perceptions toward glottal fry on hirability of young female speakers. Such information can provide insight to increase awareness of the impact of a voice type on listener perceptions and communication among young female speakers.

4.
J Voice ; 2022 Aug 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36008185

RESUMEN

Patients with complaint of vocal fatigue have perceptual, acoustic, and aerodynamic outcomes that are heterogeneous in nature. One reason may be due to different underlying biophysiological mechanisms that lead to these heterogeneous clinical presentations. Five potential mechanisms are proposed: neuromuscular, metabolic, vocal tissue, afferent, and central neural. Analytical frameworks and study designs to study these mechanisms are also addressed. A better understanding of biophysiological mechanisms of vocal fatigue can improve precision of therapeutic approaches. It can also help shift management from symptom-based to etiology-focused approaches for vocal fatigue.

5.
J Voice ; 2022 Aug 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35945099

RESUMEN

Vocal fatigue has remained an elusive construct-despite its significant impact on communication, vocation, and quality of life. Current frameworks define vocal fatigue in the context of vocal demands and vocal demand-responses. However, the impact of factors like individuals' baseline vocal fitness and perception of the demand are not well understood. What is also not well understood are the effects of specific vocal demand ingredients on an individual's vocal demand responses. Furthermore, current outcome measures utilized to capture vocal fatigue lack sensitivity and underlying mechanisms are poorly understood. These gaps have led to inconclusive next steps in how to best define, assess, monitor, and manage vocal fatigue. A conceptual framework is needed to study and better understand vocal fatigue constructs. Such a framework should consider the individual's baseline physiology, psychology, key vocal demand ingredients, and biophysiological mechanisms underlying demand responses. The objective of this paper is to help the reader better understand the complex and heterogeneous nature of vocal fatigue and its impact on reliable assessment and monitoring. Future studies will require better elucidation of vocal demand ingredients, will need more sensitive vocal demand response measures, and will need to take in to account an individual's baseline physiology and psychological factors.

6.
J Speech Lang Hear Res ; 63(2): 509-532, 2020 02 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32078404

RESUMEN

Purpose The purpose of this document is threefold: (a) review the uses of the terms "vocal fatigue," "vocal effort," "vocal load," and "vocal loading" (as found in the literature) in order to track the occurrence and the related evolution of research; (b) present a "linguistically modeled" definition of the same from the review of literature on the terms; and (c) propose conceptualized definitions of the concepts. Method A comprehensive literature search was conducted using PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, and Scientific Electronic Library Online. Four terms ("vocal fatigue," "vocal effort," "vocal load," and "vocal loading"), as well as possible variants, were included in the search, and their usages were compiled into conceptual definitions. Finally, a focus group of eight experts in the field (current authors) worked together to make conceptual connections and proposed consensus definitions. Results The occurrence and frequency of "vocal load," "vocal loading," "vocal effort," and "vocal fatigue" in the literature are presented, and summary definitions are developed. The results indicate that these terms appear to be often interchanged with blurred distinctions. Therefore, the focus group proposes the use of two new terms, "vocal demand" and "vocal demand response," in place of the terms "vocal load" and "vocal loading." We also propose standardized definitions for all four concepts. Conclusion Through a comprehensive literature search, the terms "vocal fatigue," "vocal effort," "vocal load," and "vocal loading" were explored, new terms were proposed, and standardized definitions were presented. Future work should refine these proposed definitions as research continues to address vocal health concerns.


Asunto(s)
Fonación , Terminología como Asunto , Trastornos de la Voz/diagnóstico , Voz , Consenso , Grupos Focales , Humanos
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