Update: 2004-03-07 08:42 PM -0500
TIL
BBCi, http://www.bbc.co.uk/print/science/humanbody/body/factfiles/voicebox/voice_box.shtml
Downloaded and edited by
U Kyaw Tun,
M.S. (I.P.S.T., U.S.A.). Not for sale. Prepared for students of TIL Computing and
Language Center, Yangon, MYANMAR. See
reference
materials used by UKT.
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| UKT: This was originally an interactive page in which the voice box can be rotated through 360 degrees. Click on views one after another to see it in various angles. |
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System:
Respiratory
Location: At the top of your windpipe
Physical description: Hollow, tubular structure
about 3-4 cm across
Function: To create sounds and prevent food from
entering your airways
Sound machine
Your voice box, or larynx, is a hollow tubular structure made of cartilage.
It is connected to the top of your windpipe.
Inside your voice box are two bands of tissue that form your vocal cords.
When you speak or sing, muscles pull these cords together. The air passing
through the cords makes them vibrate. You can hear these vibrations as sounds.
The shorter your vocal cords are and the faster they vibrate, the higher
the sound you produce. In both girls and boys the voice box and vocal cords grow
during puberty and cause their voices to deepen. In girls, this change may be
hardly noticeable with their voices dropping by just a couple of tones. But
boys' voice boxes grow considerably. They also tilt to a different angle in the
neck and can start to stick out as a prominent 'Adam's Apple'. Boys' voices can
drop by as much as an octave.
Guardian of the airways
On the upper part of your voice box there is a flap called the epiglottis.
When you swallow, your voice box rises and your epiglottis forms a lid over its
opening. This blocks the passageway to your respiratory tract and prevents food
and other foreign substances from entering your airways. This is why your
epiglottis is sometimes called the 'guardian of the airways'.
If anything other than air enters your voice box, you automatically
cough to clear your airways.