Elsevier

Journal of Voice

Volume 37, Issue 5, September 2023, Pages 802.e25-802.e29
Journal of Voice

Effects of Medical Masks on Voice Assessment During the COVID-19 Pandemic

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvoice.2021.04.028Get rights and content

Abstract

Objective

Voice assessment is of great significance to the evaluation of voice quality. Our study aims to explore the effects of medical masks on healthy people in acoustic, aerodynamic and formant parameters during the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, we also attempted to verify the differences between different sexes and ages.

Methods

Fifty-three healthy participants (25 males and 28 females) were involved in our study. The acoustic parameters, including fundamental frequency (F0), sound pressure level (SPL), percentage of jitter (%), percentage of shimmer (%), noise to harmonic ratio (NHR) and cepstral peak prominence (CPP), aerodynamic parameter (maximum phonation time, MPT) and formant parameters (formant frequency, F1, F2, F3) without and with wearing medical masks were included. We further investigated the potential differences in the impact on different sexes and ages (≤45 years old and >45 years old).

Results

While wearing medical masks, the SPL significantly increased (71.22±4.25 dB, 72.42±3.96 dB, P = 0.021). Jitter and shimmer significantly decreased (jitter 1.19±0.83, 0.87±0.67 P = 0.005; shimmer 4.49±2.20, 3.66±2.02 P = 0.002), as did F3 (2855±323.34 Hz, 2781.89±353.42 Hz P = 0.004). F0, MPT, F1 and F2 showed increasing trends without statistical significance, and NHR as well as CPP showed little change without and with wearing medical masks. There were no significant differences seen between males and females. Regarding to age, a significant difference in MPT was seen (>45-year-old 16.15±6.98 s, 15.38±7.02 s; ≤45-year-old 20.26±6.47 s, 21.44±6.98 s, P = 0.032).

Conclusion

Healthy participants showed a significantly higher SPL, a smaller perturbation and an evident decrease in F3 after wearing medical masks. These changes may result from the adjustment of the vocal tract and the filtration function of medical masks, leading to the stability of voices we recorded being overstated. The impacts of medical masks on sex were not evident, while the MPT in the >45-year-old group was influenced more than that in the ≤45-year-old group.

Keywords

Medical masks—Acoustic parameters—Aerodynamics—Formant—Voice assessment—COVID-19

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Meeting information: this research was presented orally at the Voice Composium 21 held by The Voice Committee of IALP & Professional Development Committee of AVA on March 19th, 2021

Funding: This work was supported by programs of the Beijing Municipal Administration of Hospitals Clinical Medicine Development of Special Funding Support, Code: XMLX201848.

Conflict of interest: All authors have declared that no conflict of interest exits.

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