Literature DB >> 32508080

Visual Enhancement of Relevant Speech in a 'Cocktail Party'.

Niti Jaha1, Stanley Shen1, Jess R Kerlin1, Antoine J Shahin1,2.   

Abstract

Lip-reading improves intelligibility in noisy acoustical environments. We hypothesized that watching mouth movements benefits speech comprehension in a 'cocktail party' by strengthening the encoding of the neural representations of the visually paired speech stream. In an audiovisual (AV) task, EEG was recorded as participants watched and listened to videos of a speaker uttering a sentence while also hearing a concurrent sentence by a speaker of the opposite gender. A key manipulation was that each audio sentence had a 200-ms segment replaced by white noise. To assess comprehension, subjects were tasked with transcribing the AV-attended sentence on randomly selected trials. In the auditory-only trials, subjects listened to the same sentences and completed the same task while watching a static picture of a speaker of either gender. Subjects directed their listening to the voice of the gender of the speaker in the video. We found that the N1 auditory-evoked potential (AEP) time-locked to white noise onsets was significantly more inhibited for the AV-attended sentences than for those of the auditorily-attended (A-attended) and AV-unattended sentences. N1 inhibition to noise onsets has been shown to index restoration of phonemic representations of degraded speech. These results underscore that attention and congruency in the AV setting help streamline the complex auditory scene, partly by reinforcing the neural representations of the visually attended stream, heightening the perception of continuity and comprehension.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Audiovisual integration; auditory-evoked potentials; phonemic restoration; ‘cocktail party’

Year:  2020        PMID: 32508080      PMCID: PMC7308176          DOI: 10.1163/22134808-20191423

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


  1 in total

1.  Effects of training and using an audio-tactile sensory substitution device on speech-in-noise understanding.

Authors:  K Cieśla; T Wolak; A Lorens; M Mentzel; H Skarżyński; A Amedi
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-02-25       Impact factor: 4.996

  1 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.