Mirrors and toothaches: commonplace manipulations of non-auditory feedback availability change perceived speech intelligibility.

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience Pub Date : 2024-11-27 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fnhum.2024.1462922
Elizabeth D Casserly, Francesca R Marino
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of two non-technical speech feedback perturbations outside the auditory modality: topical application of commercially-available benzocaine to reduce somatosensory feedback from speakers' lips and tongue tip, and the presence of a mirror to provide fully-detailed visual self-feedback. In experiment 1, speakers were recorded under normal quiet conditions (i.e., baseline), then again with benzocaine application plus auditory degradation, and finally with the addition of mirror feedback. Speech produced under normal and both feedback-altered conditions was assessed via naïve listeners' intelligibility discrimination judgments. Listeners judged speech produced under bisensory degradation to be less intelligible than speech from the un-degraded baseline, and with a greater degree of difference than previously observed with auditory-only degradation. The introduction of mirror feedback, however, did not result in relative improvements in intelligibility. Experiment 2, therefore, assessed the effect of a mirror on speech intelligibility in isolation with no other sensory feedback manipulations. Speech was recorded at baseline and then again in front of a mirror, and relative intelligibility was discriminated by naïve listeners. Speech produced with mirror feedback was judged as less intelligible than baseline tokens, indicating a negative impact of visual self-feedback in the absence of other sensory manipulations. The results of both experiments demonstrate that relatively accessible manipulations of non-auditory sensory feedback can produce speech-relevant effects, and that those effects are perceptible to naïve listeners.

镜子和牙痛:非听觉反馈可用性的常见操作改变了感知的语言可理解性。
本文研究了听觉模态之外的两种非技术语音反馈扰动的影响:局部应用商业上可用的苯佐卡因来减少说话者嘴唇和舌尖的体感反馈,以及镜子的存在来提供完全详细的视觉自我反馈。在实验1中,演讲者在正常安静条件下(即基线)录音,然后再次使用苯佐卡因加听觉退化,最后添加镜像反馈。在正常和反馈改变条件下产生的语音通过naïve听众的可理解性歧视判断进行评估。听者认为,在双感官退化的情况下产生的语音比未退化基线下产生的语音更难理解,而且与之前观察到的听觉退化相比,差异程度更大。然而,镜像反馈的引入并没有导致可理解性的相对提高。因此,实验2在没有其他感官反馈操作的情况下,评估了镜子对语音清晰度的影响。在基线处录音,然后在镜子前再次录音,相对可理解程度由naïve听众区分。通过镜像反馈产生的语音被认为比基线标记更难理解,这表明在没有其他感官操作的情况下,视觉自我反馈会产生负面影响。这两个实验的结果都表明,相对容易获得的非听觉感官反馈操作可以产生与语言相关的效果,并且这些效果对于naïve听众来说是可感知的。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
6.90%
发文量
830
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience is a first-tier electronic journal devoted to understanding the brain mechanisms supporting cognitive and social behavior in humans, and how these mechanisms might be altered in disease states. The last 25 years have seen an explosive growth in both the methods and the theoretical constructs available to study the human brain. Advances in electrophysiological, neuroimaging, neuropsychological, psychophysical, neuropharmacological and computational approaches have provided key insights into the mechanisms of a broad range of human behaviors in both health and disease. Work in human neuroscience ranges from the cognitive domain, including areas such as memory, attention, language and perception to the social domain, with this last subject addressing topics, such as interpersonal interactions, social discourse and emotional regulation. How these processes unfold during development, mature in adulthood and often decline in aging, and how they are altered in a host of developmental, neurological and psychiatric disorders, has become increasingly amenable to human neuroscience research approaches. Work in human neuroscience has influenced many areas of inquiry ranging from social and cognitive psychology to economics, law and public policy. Accordingly, our journal will provide a forum for human research spanning all areas of human cognitive, social, developmental and translational neuroscience using any research approach.
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