2000
DOI: 10.1121/1.1288668
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The use of visible speech cues for improving auditory detection of spoken sentences

Abstract: Classic accounts of the benefits of speechreading to speech recognition treat auditory and visual channels as independent sources of information that are integrated fairly early in the speech perception process. The primary question addressed in this study was whether visible movements of the speech articulators could be used to improve the detection of speech in noise, thus demonstrating an influence of speechreading on the ability to detect, rather than recognize, speech. In the first experiment, ten normal-… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

23
410
3
1

Year Published

2007
2007
2021
2021

Publication Types

Select...
6
3

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 449 publications
(445 citation statements)
references
References 36 publications
23
410
3
1
Order By: Relevance
“…Consistent with this explanation, the visual cue provided, if anything, a greater benefit for spatially separated sources when presented binaurally, which had the lowest threshold overall, than when presented diotically. The magnitude of the benefit we observed, which was on the order of a few decibels, is in the range found by other studies examining the benefits of visual cues for the detection and identification of speech (e.g., Sumby and Pollack 1954;Grant and Seitz 2000;Helfer and Freyman 2005).…”
Section: Visual Cues Provide Different Benefits For Different Kinds Osupporting
confidence: 78%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Consistent with this explanation, the visual cue provided, if anything, a greater benefit for spatially separated sources when presented binaurally, which had the lowest threshold overall, than when presented diotically. The magnitude of the benefit we observed, which was on the order of a few decibels, is in the range found by other studies examining the benefits of visual cues for the detection and identification of speech (e.g., Sumby and Pollack 1954;Grant and Seitz 2000;Helfer and Freyman 2005).…”
Section: Visual Cues Provide Different Benefits For Different Kinds Osupporting
confidence: 78%
“…However, temporal uncertainty seems to have a larger effect on performance when target and masker are more similar, such as when a masker is tonal rather than noise (Bonino and Leibold 2008). Moreover, both speech detection (e.g., Grant and Seitz 2000;Bernstein et al 2004;Tye-Murray et al 2011) and speech intelligibility (e.g., Sumby and Pollack 1954;Helfer and Freyman 2005) are enhanced when a visual stimulus depicting appropriate lip movements accompanies speech masked by noise. Bernstein et al (2004) noted that simpler visual cues, such as the presence of an abstract shape whose size follows the broadband envelope of the target speech or even a static shape whose appearance coincides with the target presentation, can also improve speech-in-noise detection thresholds.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the auditory modality will eventually dominate speech perception when visual information is distorted [10,24]. Conversely, noise and auditory compression artifacts can mask essential spectral frequencies and lead to distracting audio effects [23]; in speech perception, reduced audio quality typically leads to an increased dependency on the visual modality [13]. Clearly, severe quality drops will make information from either modality ambiguous; however, within the boundaries of what is intelligible, temporal integration may not be equally affected.…”
Section: Temporal Integration and Quality Distortionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Stein and Meredith, 1993). Such multisensory processing can affect a range of different behavioral parameters, such as reaction times (Welch and Warren, 1986;Raab, 1962), stimulus detection rate (Grant and Seitz, 2000), accuracy of stimulus identification (Giard and Peronnet, 1999) as well as learning effects on stimulus processing Lehmann and Murray, 2005). While for example the decrease in reaction times under multisensory conditions have been largely reported for human subjects in auditory-visual recognition tasks, no behavioral data to our knowledge are available in monkeys performing similar protocols.…”
Section: Role Of Non-specific Connections?mentioning
confidence: 99%