Point-light facial displays enhance comprehension of speech in noise.

L D Rosenblum, J A Johnson, H M Saldaña
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引用次数: 163

Abstract

Seeing a talker's face can improve the perception of speech in noise. There is little known about which characteristics of the face are useful for enhancing the degraded signal. In this study, a point-light technique was employed to help isolate the salient kinematic aspects of a visible articulating face. In this technique, fluorescent dots were arranged on the lips, teeth, tongue, cheeks, and jaw of an actor. The actor was videotaped speaking in the dark, so that when shown to observers, only the moving dots were seen. To test whether these reduced images could contribute to the perception of degraded speech, noise-embedded sentences were dubbed with the point-light images at various signal-to-noise ratios. It was found that these images could significantly improve comprehension for adults with normal hearing and that the images became more effective as participants gained experience with the stimuli. These results have implications for uncovering salient visual speech information as well as in the development of telecommunication systems for listeners who are hearing impaired.

点光面部显示增强了对噪音中的语音的理解。
看到说话人的脸可以改善在噪音中说话的感觉。对于人脸的哪些特征对增强退化信号有用,我们知之甚少。在这项研究中,点光技术被用来帮助隔离明显的运动方面的可见铰接的脸。在这种技术中,荧光点被排列在演员的嘴唇、牙齿、舌头、脸颊和下巴上。这个演员在黑暗中说话被录了下来,所以当观众看到时,只有移动的点被看到。为了测试这些减少的图像是否有助于感知退化的语音,将嵌入噪声的句子以不同的信噪比与点光图像进行配音。结果发现,这些图像可以显著提高听力正常的成年人的理解力,并且随着参与者对刺激的经验增加,图像的效果也会越来越好。这些结果对揭示突出的视觉语言信息以及为听力受损的听众开发电信系统具有启示意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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