Toe-to-Toe with Ingo: An NCVS Podcast

The Role of Basic Science in Laryngology

March 20, 2026

Episode 1

Guest Speakers: Dr. Ted Mau and Dr. Elizabeth DiRenzo

Toe to Toe with Ingo

In the inaugural episode of Toe-to-Toe with Ingo, voice scientist Dr. Ingo Titze is joined by Stanford University laryngologists Dr. Ted Mau and Dr. Elizabeth DiRenzo for an in-depth conversation on the role of basic science in laryngology. Together, they explore how foundational scientific disciplines—acoustics, fluid mechanics, biomechanics, and cellular and molecular biology—inform the study of voice production and influence the diagnosis and treatment of voice disorders.

The discussion examines how these scientific principles shape both research and clinical practice, including the training of future laryngologists. The group considers the relative strengths of different research approaches, including human subject research, animal models, bench models, and computer simulations, and discusses how emerging tools such as machine learning and artificial intelligence may change the landscape of voice science in the coming decades.

Along the way, the conversation addresses important questions facing the field: Will basic science continue to play a central role in laryngology? How might evolving NIH policies influence the use of animal models in research? And why should clinicians care deeply about the fundamental physics and physiology underlying normal voice production?

As the first episode of the series, this discussion sets the tone for Toe-to-Toe with Ingo: thoughtful, rigorous conversations among scientists who are willing to challenge ideas, engage respectfully in disagreement, and work together to advance understanding in voice and speech science.

Guest Speakers

Dr. Ted Mau

Dr. Ted Mau is a board-certified, fellowship-trained laryngologist with Stanford Health Care and Professor of Otolaryngology – Head & Neck Surgery at the Stanford University School of Medicine, where he also serves as Chief of the Division of Laryngology. Prior to joining Stanford in 2025, he spent 17 years at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, where he directed the Voice Center and served as Vice Chair of Research for the Department of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery. His clinical practice focuses on disorders of the voice, airway, and swallowing, and he is widely recognized for his expertise in microlaryngeal surgery, vocal fold paralysis, and other complex laryngeal conditions. As a physician-scientist, Dr. Mau conducts both clinical and laboratory research in voice science and voice disorders, including NIH-funded work on computational voice simulation, neuromodulation for nerve injury, and advanced surgical technologies. He has published extensively in leading journals, served as associate editor for The Laryngoscope, and is a fellow of the American Laryngological Association and the Triological Society.

Dr. Elizabeth DiRenzo

Dr. Elizabeth DiRenzo is Associate Professor of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery at Stanford University, practicing speech-language pathologists in Stanford Voice and Swallowing Center, and director of the DiRenzo Voice Research Laboratory. Her goal is to advance patient care and improve treatment outcomes through study of both normal laryngeal function and the pathophysiology of voice disorders. To achieve this overarching objective, Dr. DiRenzo’s laboratory utilizes a highly collaborative, multifaceted approach consisting of basic and translational research techniques. She is widely recognized for her contributions to academic medicine, mentorship, and the integration of basic science into clinical training.

Dr. Ingo Titze

Dr. Ingo Titze, educated as a physicist (Ph.D.) and engineer (M.S.E.E.), has applied his scientific knowledge to a lifelong love of clinical voice and vocal music. His research interests include biomechanics of human tissues, acoustic phonetics, speech science, voice disorders, professional voice, music acoustics, and the computer simulation of voice. He is the father of vocology, a specialty in speech-language pathology. He defined the word as “the science and practice of voice habilitation.”

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