Perceptual dominance during lipreading |
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Authors: | Randolph D. Easton Marylu Basala |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Psychology, Boston College, 02167, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
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Abstract: | Two experiments were pedormed under visual-only and visual-auditory discrepancy conditions (dubs) to assess observers’ abilities to read speech information on a face. In the first experiment, identification and multiple choice testing were used. In addition, the relation between visual and auditory phonetic information was manipulated and related to perceptual bias. In the second experiment, the “compellingness” of the visual-auditory discrepancy as a single speech event was manipulated. Subjects also rated the confidence they had that their perception of the lipped word was accurate. Results indicated that competing visual information exerted little effect on auditory speech recognition, but visual speech recognition was substantially interfered with when discrepant auditory information was present. The extent of auditory bias was found to be related to the abilities of observers to read speech under nondiscrepancy conditions, the magnitude of the visual-auditory discrepancy, and the compellingheSS of the visual-auditory discrepancy as a single event. Auditory bias during speech was found to be a moderately compelling conscious experience, and not simply a case of confused responding or guessing. Results were discussed in terms of current models of perceptual dominance and related to results from modality discordance during space perception. |
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