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The Impact and Status of Carol Fowler's Supramodal Theory of Multisensory Speech Perception
Authors:Lawrence D. Rosenblum  Josh Dorsi  James W. Dias
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of California, Riversidelawrence.rosenblum@ucr.edu;3. Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside
Abstract:ABSTRACT

One important contribution of Carol Fowler's direct approach to speech perception is its account of multisensory perception. This supramodal account proposes a speech function that detects supramodal information available across audition, vision, and touch. This detection allows for the recovery of articulatory primitives that provide the basis of a common currency shared between modalities as well as between perception and production. Common currency allows for perceptual experience to be shared between modalities and supports perceptually guided speaking as well as production-guided perception. In this report, we discuss the contribution and status of the supramodal approach relative to recent research in multisensory speech perception. We argue that the approach has helped motivate a multisensory revolution in perceptual psychology. We then review the new behavioral and neurophysiological research on (a) supramodal information, (b) cross-sensory sharing of experience, and (c) perceptually guided speaking as well as production guided speech perception. We conclude that Fowler's supramodal theory has fared quite well in light of this research.
Keywords:
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