When half a face is as good as a whole: Effects of simple substantial occlusion on visual and audiovisual speech perception

被引:0
作者
Timothy R. Jordan
Sharon M. Thomas
机构
[1] University of Leicester,College of Medicine, Biological Sciences and Psychology
来源
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics | 2011年 / 73卷
关键词
Speech perception; Face perception; Hearing; Audiovisual speech; McGurk effect;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The visible movement of a talker’s face is an influential component of speech perception. However, the ability of this influence to function when large areas of the face (~50%) are covered by simple substantial occlusions, and so are not visible to the observer, has yet to be fully determined. In Experiment 1, both visual speech identification and the influence of visual speech on identifying congruent and incongruent auditory speech were investigated using displays of a whole (unoccluded) talking face and of the same face occluded vertically so that the entire left or right hemiface was covered. Both the identification of visual speech and its influence on auditory speech perception were identical across all three face displays. Experiment 2 replicated and extended these results, showing that visual and audiovisual speech perception also functioned well with other simple substantial occlusions (horizontal and diagonal). Indeed, displays in which entire upper facial areas were occluded produced performance levels equal to those obtained with unoccluded displays. Occluding entire lower facial areas elicited some impairments in performance, but visual speech perception and visual speech influences on auditory speech perception were still apparent. Finally, implications of these findings for understanding the processes supporting visual and audiovisual speech perception are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:2270 / 2285
页数:15
相关论文
共 134 条
[1]  
Annett M(1970)A classification of hand preference by association analysis British Journal of Psychology 61 303-321
[2]  
Bennett H(1987)Expressive and perceptual asymmetries of the resting face Neuropsychologia 25 681-687
[3]  
Delmonico R(1971)The effect of degree of facial exposure and the vertical angle of vision on speechreading performance Teacher of the Deaf 69 322-326
[4]  
Bond C(1993)Recognizing depth-rotated objects: Evidence and conditions for three-dimensional viewpoint invariance Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 19 1162-1182
[5]  
Berger KW(1995)Viewpoint-dependent mechanisms in visual object recognition: Reply to Tarr and Bülthoff (1995) Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 21 1506-1514
[6]  
Garner M(1988)Contours revealed by concealment Nature 333 803-804
[7]  
Sudman J(2005)Are the perceptual biases found in chimeric face processing reflected in eye-movement patterns? Neuropsychologia 43 52-59
[8]  
Biederman I(1982)Asymmetries in moving faces British Journal of Psychology 73 95-103
[9]  
Gerhardstein PC(1986)The lateralization of lip-read sounds: A first look Brain and Cognition 5 1-21
[10]  
Biederman I(1999)The left visual hemispace bias for the perception of composite faces: A test of the difficulty discrimination hypothesis Brain and Cognition 40 71-75