Medical Educational Narrative- Raspy, calm, soothing, corporate woman

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Elearning
11
1

Description

This calm medical narrative is done with a professional and friendly tone. It provides a great corporate explainer feel along with a commercial ad and educational content.

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

North American (Canadian-General) North American (General)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
The human voice is generated when interaction occurs between three key parts of the lungs. The vocal folds within the larynx or voice box and the articulator The lungs provide the pump. They send airflow as well as control air pressure to the vocal fold, which then vibrate, creating audible pulses that form the Lawrenceville Sound source pitch and tone are fine tuned by the muscles of the larynx, which adjusts in both length and tension. Finally, the articulator, located above the larynx then interact with the living in jail airflow to strengthen or weaken it. The articulator are composed of the tongue, pallet, cheek and lips. Together. The vocal folds and the articulator are able to create highly intricate array of sound. Humans can leverage this mechanism to convey complex emotions, suggesting happiness, fear, sadness, surprise, anger and more.