一种在极高基频发声中上皮细胞占优势的建议。

IF 2.3 2区 物理与天体物理 Q2 ACOUSTICS
Ingo R Titze, Tobias Riede
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在这篇假设文章中,我们探讨了发声中基本频率的上限。大多数哺乳动物发声是由气流诱导的声带自我持续振动产生的,其基本频率由褶皱中的多个组织层决定,包括肌肉、韧带和上皮组织。这些层决定了声带的长度、振动的深度和振动所需的粘弹性。虽然目前的声带模型可以解释很大范围的频率,但基于已知的组织特性,一些极高频率的发声(例如人类的哨声)仍然无法解释。我们假设上皮表面附近的薄层成为高频弹性的主要贡献者。解剖研究表明,上皮呈弱异速缩放,即上皮细胞层数和上皮厚度随体大呈弱缩放。如果这一层占主导地位,这可能允许物种产生超出典型尺寸依赖的光谱范围的频率。使用组织特性数据的计算模拟支持这一假设。我们提出了一种模型,其中上皮细胞与致密层中的胶原纤维结合形成能够产生千赫兹范围内最小振动深度的基频的结构。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A proposal for epithelial dominance in extremely high fundamental frequency vocalizations.

In this hypothesis article, we explore the upper limit of the fundamental frequency in vocalization. Most mammalian vocalizations are produced by airflow-induced, self-sustained vibration of vocal folds, with fundamental frequency being determined by multiple tissue layers in the folds, including muscle, ligament, and epithelial tissues. These layers contribute to vocal fold length, depth of vibration, and viscoelasticity needed for oscillation. While current vocal fold models explain a large range of frequencies, some extremely high-frequency vocalizations (e.g., whistle voice in humans) remain unexplained based on known tissue properties. We hypothesize that the thin layers near the epithelial surface become primary contributors to elasticity at high frequencies. Anatomical studies indicate weak allometric scaling in the epithelium, i.e., number of epithelial cell layers and thickness of the epithelium scale weakly with body size. This could allow species to produce frequencies outside the typical size-dependent spectral range if this layer dominates. Computational simulations using tissue property data support this hypothesis. We propose a model in which epithelial cells combined with collagen fibers in the lamina densa form structures capable of generating fundamental frequencies in the kilohertz range with minimal depths of vibration.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
16.70%
发文量
1433
审稿时长
4.7 months
期刊介绍: Since 1929 The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America has been the leading source of theoretical and experimental research results in the broad interdisciplinary study of sound. Subject coverage includes: linear and nonlinear acoustics; aeroacoustics, underwater sound and acoustical oceanography; ultrasonics and quantum acoustics; architectural and structural acoustics and vibration; speech, music and noise; psychology and physiology of hearing; engineering acoustics, transduction; bioacoustics, animal bioacoustics.
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