Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences de Lyon, UMR CNRS 5292 Université Lyon 1, 69366 Lyon Cedex 07, France.
J Acoust Soc Am. 2011 Jul;130(1):283-91. doi: 10.1121/1.3592223.
Lip-reading has been shown to improve the intelligibility of speech in multitalker situations, where auditory stream segregation naturally takes place. This study investigated whether the benefit of lip-reading is a result of a primary audiovisual interaction that enhances the obligatory streaming mechanism. Two behavioral experiments were conducted involving sequences of French vowels that alternated in fundamental frequency. In Experiment 1, subjects attempted to identify the order of items in a sequence. In Experiment 2, subjects attempted to detect a disruption to temporal isochrony across alternate items. Both tasks are disrupted by streaming, thus providing a measure of primary or obligatory streaming. Visual lip gestures articulating alternate vowels were synchronized with the auditory sequence. Overall, the results were consistent with the hypothesis that visual lip gestures enhance segregation by affecting primary auditory streaming. Moreover, increases in the naturalness of visual lip gestures and auditory vowels, and corresponding increases in audiovisual congruence may potentially lead to increases in the effect of visual lip gestures on streaming.
唇读已被证明可以提高多说话人情况下言语的可理解度,在这种情况下,听觉流分离自然发生。本研究探讨了唇读的益处是否是一种增强强制性流分离机制的主要视听交互的结果。进行了两项行为实验,涉及交替基频的法语元音序列。在实验 1 中,受试者试图识别序列中项目的顺序。在实验 2 中,受试者试图检测到交替项目之间的时间等时性中断。这两个任务都受到流的干扰,因此提供了主要或强制性流的测量。 articulate 交替元音的视觉唇动与听觉序列同步。总的来说,结果与假设一致,即视觉唇动通过影响主要听觉流分离来增强分离。此外,视觉唇动和听觉元音的自然度增加,以及相应的视听一致性增加,可能会导致视觉唇动对流分离的影响增加。