2016
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0155084
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Breathing and Singing: Objective Characterization of Breathing Patterns in Classical Singers

Abstract: Singing involves distinct respiratory kinematics (i.e. movements of rib cage and abdomen) to quiet breathing because of different demands on the respiratory system. Professional classical singers often advocate for the advantages of an active control of the abdomen on singing performance. This is presumed to prevent shortening of the diaphragm, elevate the rib cage, and thus promote efficient generation of subglottal pressure during phonation. However, few studies have investigated these patterns quantitativel… Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(31 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…Bottom line: The myth that belly breathing and an upright posture support speaker charisma is busted. It is true that belly breathing has a favorable effect on voice quality, which is also consistent with studies on singing and speech pathology (Salomoni & van den Hoorn, 2016;Thorpe et al, 2001;Xu et al, 1991). However, this favorable effect does not include those acoustic-prosodic parameters that listeners use when rating speaker charisma.…”
Section: Myth 7: Filled Pauses Are Bad For Perceived Speaker Charismasupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Bottom line: The myth that belly breathing and an upright posture support speaker charisma is busted. It is true that belly breathing has a favorable effect on voice quality, which is also consistent with studies on singing and speech pathology (Salomoni & van den Hoorn, 2016;Thorpe et al, 2001;Xu et al, 1991). However, this favorable effect does not include those acoustic-prosodic parameters that listeners use when rating speaker charisma.…”
Section: Myth 7: Filled Pauses Are Bad For Perceived Speaker Charismasupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Given that this question did not direct the soprano's perception towards any particular part of her body, it allowed her to reflect freely and respond as she considered relevant. This convergence of sensations among the singers indicates a common axis of respiratory support in the emission of upper high notes and, indeed, in all vocal emission (18) . Although some authors do consider the classiacl singer not capable of describing his or her physical sensations during singing (19) , the sopranos in their self-report referred to concrete elements during the emission of upper high notes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…This respiratory rate is higher than of trained but lower than of untrained singers. 71 We can compare with an actual COVID-19 infection event during a choir rehearsal in the state of Washington in the USA on 10 March 2020, for which conditions are well-documented. 38 Our algorithm reproduces the observed very high infection rate (>80%) for a super infectious subject in the room and a breathing/vocalization ratio of about 0.3, very close to the algorithm settings applied here.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This respiratory rate is higher than of trained but lower than of untrained singers. 71 We can compare with an actual COVID-19 infection event during a choir rehearsal in the state of Washington in the USA on 10…”
Section: Choir Practicementioning
confidence: 99%