2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10162-012-0314-7
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How Visual Cues for when to Listen Aid Selective Auditory Attention

Abstract: Visual cues are known to aid auditory processing when they provide direct information about signal content, as in lip reading. However, some studies hint that visual cues also aid auditory perception by guiding attention to the target in a mixture of similar sounds. The current study directly tests this idea for complex, nonspeech auditory signals, using a visual cue providing only timing information about the target. Listeners were asked to identify a target zebra finch bird song played at a random time withi… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…The present findings are in general agreement with recent studies which have examined the extent to which adults benefit from knowing when to listen for conditions believed to produce substantial informational masking (Best et al, 2007;Varghese et al, 2012). observed a larger effect in a random-frequency, two-tone masker than in a broadband noise for a single group of adult listeners.…”
Section: B Effect Of Signal-temporal Uncertaintysupporting
confidence: 92%
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“…The present findings are in general agreement with recent studies which have examined the extent to which adults benefit from knowing when to listen for conditions believed to produce substantial informational masking (Best et al, 2007;Varghese et al, 2012). observed a larger effect in a random-frequency, two-tone masker than in a broadband noise for a single group of adult listeners.…”
Section: B Effect Of Signal-temporal Uncertaintysupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Thus, defining the listening interval either through a visual cue or allowing the listener to initiate the trial appears to result in a similar benefit of knowing when to listen for a 1000-Hz signal embedded in a random-frequency, two-tone masker. A similar pattern of results has also been reported for bird song stimuli (Best et al, 2007;Varghese et al, 2012). Varghese et al (2012) asked listeners to detect a target bird song presented in either a chorus of novel bird songs or in a noise masker which had the same long-term average spectral characteristics.…”
Section: B Effect Of Signal-temporal Uncertaintysupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…We know from the literature on typical development that visual cues from the face have an influence on speech perception. For example, focusing on lip movements can enhance the perception of speech when the quality of the speech is degraded (Varghese, Ozmeral, Best & Shinn-Cunningham, 2012) and when talking on the telephone we need to modify our communication strategy (Doherty-Sneddon & Kent, 1996). Therefore, it may be difficulties in communication (processing of speech and language) that drive a preferential attention bias to the mouth region in autism.…”
Section: Cross Syndrome Comparison -Specific Language Impairmentmentioning
confidence: 99%