1981
DOI: 10.1038/291150a0
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Voice pitch as an aid to lipreading

Abstract: The totally deafened adult, unable to make use of a hearing aid, has no alternative to lipreading for everyday communication. Lipreading, however, is no substitute for hearing speech. Many lipreaders have great difficulty in ideal conditions and even the best lipreaders find the task demanding and tiring. Prosthetic attempts to substitute for lost hearing have centred on three distinct types of intervention, visual, tactile, and electrocochlear. As none of these is likely to yield a good understanding of a spe… Show more

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Cited by 111 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…On the reports of prior research, we might have expected the analog of the first formant (Bernstein et al, 1992) or of the fundamental frequency of phonation (Rosen et al, 1981) to combine readily with the video samples in evoking an impression of the linguistic message. Why did the results of our test depart from the precedents?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the reports of prior research, we might have expected the analog of the first formant (Bernstein et al, 1992) or of the fundamental frequency of phonation (Rosen et al, 1981) to combine readily with the video samples in evoking an impression of the linguistic message. Why did the results of our test depart from the precedents?…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been shown repeatedly that nonspeech auditory signals combine with lip-read information to produce genuine phonetic percepts (e.g. Breeuwer & Plomp, 1986;Green & Miller, 1985;Rosen, Fourcin, & Moore, 1981).…”
Section: Cued Speech Processing In the Deaf 467 Questions For Furthermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such multi-modal processing results in fast and accurate recognition of the perceived signals. Speech perception effectively utilizes the visual information from the speaker's face not only in patients with hearing loss but also in healthy subjects; i.e., speech perception in degraded conditions such as background noise can be improved by visual information obtained from the speaker's face [12,15]. Therefore, visual cues (speaker's face) presented with auditory cues (speech sound) will be utilized to complement the auditory information in every situation.…”
Section: Recruitment Of Visual Cues In Degraded Speech Conditionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10.1). The "lip-reading" phenomenon is well known in patients with degraded speech perception; i.e., reduced speech perception in the presence of poor auditory conditions, such as background noise and in patients with hearing loss, is improved by the combined presentation of visual speech [12,15]. If the degraded speech can be perceived as bimodal audiovisual stimuli, the visual information from the speaker's face can be effectively utilized to compensate for the inadequate auditory information [2,9,13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%