Jesse Alexandra, McQueen James M
a Department of Psychology , University of Massachusetts , Amherst , MA , USA.
Q J Exp Psychol (Hove). 2014;67(4):793-808. doi: 10.1080/17470218.2013.834371. Epub 2013 Oct 18.
Visual cues to the individual segments of speech and to sentence prosody guide speech recognition. The present study tested whether visual suprasegmental cues to the stress patterns of words can also constrain recognition. Dutch listeners use acoustic suprasegmental cues to lexical stress (changes in duration, amplitude, and pitch) in spoken-word recognition. We asked here whether they can also use visual suprasegmental cues. In two categorization experiments, Dutch participants saw a speaker say fragments of word pairs that were segmentally identical but differed in their stress realization (e.g., 'ca-vi from cavia "guinea pig" vs. 'ka-vi from kaviaar "caviar"). Participants were able to distinguish between these pairs from seeing a speaker alone. Only the presence of primary stress in the fragment, not its absence, was informative. Participants were able to distinguish visually primary from secondary stress on first syllables, but only when the fragment-bearing target word carried phrase-level emphasis. Furthermore, participants distinguished fragments with primary stress on their second syllable from those with secondary stress on their first syllable (e.g., pro-'jec from projector "projector" vs. 'pro-jec from projectiel "projectile"), independently of phrase-level emphasis. Seeing a speaker thus contributes to spoken-word recognition by providing suprasegmental information about the presence of primary lexical stress.
语音各个部分以及句子韵律的视觉线索有助于语音识别。本研究测试了单词重音模式的视觉超音段线索是否也能限制识别。荷兰听众在识别口语单词时会利用声学超音段线索来识别词汇重音(时长、振幅和音高的变化)。我们在此研究他们是否也能利用视觉超音段线索。在两个分类实验中,荷兰参与者观看一位说话者说出单词对的片段,这些片段在语音上相同,但重音实现方式不同(例如,“ca-vi”来自“cavia”[豚鼠],而“ka-vi”来自“kaviaar”[鱼子酱])。参与者仅通过观看说话者就能区分这些单词对。片段中只有主重音的存在,而非其缺失,才具有信息价值。参与者能够从视觉上区分第一个音节上的主重音和次重音,但只有当承载目标单词的片段带有短语层面的重音时才行。此外,参与者能够区分第二个音节上有主重音的片段和第一个音节上有次重音的片段(例如,“pro-'jec”来自“projector”[投影仪],而“'pro-jec”来自“projectiel”[射弹]),且不受短语层面重音的影响。因此,观看说话者通过提供有关主词汇重音存在的超音段信息,有助于口语单词的识别。