具有完整清晰可听语音的视听互动。

Chris Davis, Jeesun Kim
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引用次数: 54

摘要

观察说话者的面部(视觉言语)对清晰呈现的完整听觉刺激处理的影响,采用两种可能对说话时产生的发音运动动作敏感的测量方法进行了研究。这些实验的目的是强调需要对视听(AV)语音的效果进行解释,明确考虑到铰接动作的特性。第一个实验采用了音节监测任务,要求参与者监测外来载体短语中的目标音节。研究发现,观看说话者移动的脸(移动脸条件)比观看只听不动的脸(静止脸条件)更有助于准确识别(击中和正确拒绝)语音音节。第二个实验通过调查是否会在短语持续时间的估计中发现AV效应来检验口语短语的加工。研究发现,看到说话人移动的脸会产生两种效果。首先,移动面部条件的持续时间估计明显长于静止面部听觉条件。第二,在移动面部条件下的听觉持续时间估计与实际持续时间可靠相关,而在静止面部条件下的听觉持续时间估计与实际持续时间不可靠相关。第三个实验是为了确定在移动面部条件下,估计和实际持续时间之间的更强相关性是否可能是由于AV呈现的一般特性。实验3采用实验2的步骤,但使用了与实验2具有相同时间线索的非言语刺激。研究发现,简单地同时呈现听觉和视觉计时信息并不能产生更可靠的持续时间估计。此外,当从语音环境中释放出来(实验2中使用的)时,听觉刺激的持续时间估计与实际持续时间显着相关。总之,这些结果表明,视觉言语可以帮助分析通过观看话语产生的信息所提供的清晰呈现的听觉刺激。我们认为,这些发现与感知和行动之间存在加工联系是一致的,即观看说话者说话会激活感知者的言语运动图式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Audio-visual interactions with intact clearly audible speech.

The effects of viewing the face of the talker (visual speech) on the processing of clearly presented intact auditory stimuli were investigated using two measures likely to be sensitive to the articulatory motor actions produced in speaking. The aim of these experiments was to highlight the need for accounts of the effects of audio-visual (AV) speech that explicitly consider the properties of articulated action. The first experiment employed a syllable-monitoring task in which participants were required to monitor for target syllables within foreign carrier phrases. An AV effect was found in that seeing a talker's moving face (moving face condition) assisted in more accurate recognition (hits and correct rejections) of spoken syllables than of auditory-only still face (still face condition) presentations. The second experiment examined processing of spoken phrases by investigating whether an AV effect would be found for estimates of phrase duration. Two effects of seeing the moving face of the talker were found. First, the moving face condition had significantly longer duration estimates than the still face auditory-only condition. Second, estimates of auditory duration made in the moving face condition reliably correlated with the actual durations whereas those made in the still face auditory condition did not. The third experiment was carried out to determine whether the stronger correlation between estimated and actual duration in the moving face condition might have been due to generic properties of AV presentation. Experiment 3 employed the procedures of the second experiment but used stimuli that were not perceived as speech although they possessed the same timing cues as those of the speech stimuli of Experiment 2. It was found that simply presenting both auditory and visual timing information did not result in more reliable duration estimates. Further, when released from the speech context (used in Experiment 2), duration estimates for the auditory-only stimuli were significantly correlated with actual durations. In all, these results demonstrate that visual speech can assist in the analysis of clearly presented auditory stimuli in tasks concerned with information provided by viewing the production of an utterance. We suggest that these findings are consistent with there being a processing link between perception and action such that viewing a talker speaking will activate speech motor schemas in the perceiver.

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