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Reading your own lips: Common-coding theory and visual speech perception
Authors:Nancy Tye-Murray  Brent P Spehar  Joel Myerson  Sandra Hale  Mitchell S Sommers
Institution:1. Department of Otolaryngology, Washington University School of Medicine, Campus Box 8115, 660 South Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO, 63124, USA
2. Department of Psychology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA
Abstract:Common-coding theory posits that (1) perceiving an action activates the same representations of motor plans that are activated by actually performing that action, and (2) because of individual differences in the ways that actions are performed, observing recordings of one’s own previous behavior activates motor plans to an even greater degree than does observing someone else’s behavior. We hypothesized that if observing oneself activates motor plans to a greater degree than does observing others, and if these activated plans contribute to perception, then people should be able to lipread silent video clips of their own previous utterances more accurately than they can lipread video clips of other talkers. As predicted, two groups of participants were able to lipread video clips of themselves, recorded more than two weeks earlier, significantly more accurately than video clips of others. These results suggest that visual input activates speech motor activity that links to word representations in the mental lexicon.
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