Data Warehouse for Speech Perception and Model Testing

Walden et al 1990

Auditory and Visual Cues in Perception

Papers:

Massaro, D.W. & Cohen, M.M. (1999). Speech perception in hearing-impaired perceivers: Synergy of multiple modalities. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Science, 42, 21-41.

Walden, B., Montgomery, A., Prosek, R. A., & Hawkins, D. B. (1990). Visual biasing of normal and impaired auditory speech perception. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 33, 163-173.

Intersensory biasing occurs when cues in one sensory modality influence the perception of discrepant cues in another modality. Visual biasing of auditory stop consonant perception was examined in two related experiments in an attempt to clarify the role of hearing impairment on susceptibility to visual biasing of auditory speech perception. Fourteen computer-generated acoustic approximations of consonant-vowel syllables forming a /ba-da-ga/ continuum were presented for labeling as one of the three exemplars, via audition alone and in synchrony with natural visual articulations of /ba/ and of /ga/. Labeling functions were generated for each test condition showing the percentage of /ba/, /da/, and /ga/ responses to each of the 14 synthetic syllables. The subjects of the first experiment were 15 normal-hearing and 15 hearing-impaired observers. The hearing-impaired subjects demonstrated a greater susceptibility to biasing from visual cues than did the normal-hearing subjects. In the second experiment, the auditory stimuli were presented in a low-level background noise to 15 normal-hearing observers. A comparison of their labeling responses with those from the first experiment suggested that hearing-impaired persons may develop a propensity to rely on visual cues as a result of long-term hearing impairment. The results were discussed in terms of theories of intersensory bias.

Subjects:
xxxx

Design:

xxxx

Data:
wald90.dat

Model:
FLMP; wlad90m1.f
FLMP; wlad90m1.lst
FLMP; wlad90m1.fit