Literature DB >> 31264596

The Time Course of Audio-Visual Phoneme Identification: a High Temporal Resolution Study.

Carolina Sánchez-García1, Sonia Kandel2, Christophe Savariaux2, Salvador Soto-Faraco1,3.   

Abstract

Speech unfolds in time and, as a consequence, its perception requires temporal integration. Yet, studies addressing audio-visual speech processing have often overlooked this temporal aspect. Here, we address the temporal course of audio-visual speech processing in a phoneme identification task using a Gating paradigm. We created disyllabic Spanish word-like utterances (e.g., /pafa/, /paθa/, …) from high-speed camera recordings. The stimuli differed only in the middle consonant (/f/, /θ/, /s/, /r/, /g/), which varied in visual and auditory saliency. As in classical Gating tasks, the utterances were presented in fragments of increasing length (gates), here in 10 ms steps, for identification and confidence ratings. We measured correct identification as a function of time (at each gate) for each critical consonant in audio, visual and audio-visual conditions, and computed the Identification Point and Recognition Point scores. The results revealed that audio-visual identification is a time-varying process that depends on the relative strength of each modality (i.e., saliency). In some cases, audio-visual identification followed the pattern of one dominant modality (either A or V), when that modality was very salient. In other cases, both modalities contributed to identification, hence resulting in audio-visual advantage or interference with respect to unimodal conditions. Both unimodal dominance and audio-visual interaction patterns may arise within the course of identification of the same utterance, at different times. The outcome of this study suggests that audio-visual speech integration models should take into account the time-varying nature of visual and auditory saliency.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Audio-visual; gating; multisensory integration; speech perception

Year:  2018        PMID: 31264596     DOI: 10.1163/22134808-00002560

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Multisens Res        ISSN: 2213-4794            Impact factor:   2.286


  2 in total

1.  The Role of the Root in Spoken Word Recognition in Hebrew: An Auditory Gating Paradigm.

Authors:  Marina Oganyan; Richard A Wright
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-06-07

2.  The visual speech head start improves perception and reduces superior temporal cortex responses to auditory speech.

Authors:  Patrick J Karas; John F Magnotti; Brian A Metzger; Lin L Zhu; Kristen B Smith; Daniel Yoshor; Michael S Beauchamp
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2019-08-08       Impact factor: 8.140

  2 in total

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