Department of Speech, Language & Hearing Sciences, George Washington University, Washington, DC.
Am J Audiol. 2022 Jun 2;31(2):453-469. doi: 10.1044/2021_AJA-21-00112. Epub 2022 Mar 22.
The goal of this review article is to reinvigorate interest in lipreading and lipreading training for adults with acquired hearing loss. Most adults benefit from being able to see the talker when speech is degraded; however, the effect size is related to their lipreading ability, which is typically poor in adults who have experienced normal hearing through most of their lives. Lipreading training has been viewed as a possible avenue for rehabilitation of adults with an acquired hearing loss, but most training approaches have not been particularly successful. Here, we describe lipreading and theoretically motivated approaches to its training, as well as examples of successful training paradigms. We discuss some extensions to auditory-only (AO) and audiovisual (AV) speech recognition.
Visual speech perception and word recognition are described. Traditional and contemporary views of training and perceptual learning are outlined. We focus on the roles of external and internal feedback and the training task in perceptual learning, and we describe results of lipreading training experiments.
Lipreading is commonly characterized as limited to viseme perception. However, evidence demonstrates subvisemic perception of visual phonetic information. Lipreading words also relies on lexical constraints, not unlike auditory spoken word recognition. Lipreading has been shown to be difficult to improve through training, but under specific feedback and task conditions, training can be successful, and learning can generalize to untrained materials, including AV sentence stimuli in noise. The results on lipreading have implications for AO and AV training and for use of acoustically processed speech in face-to-face communication.
Given its importance for speech recognition with a hearing loss, we suggest that the research and clinical communities integrate lipreading in their efforts to improve speech recognition in adults with acquired hearing loss.
本文旨在重新唤起人们对成人获得性听力损失者唇读和唇读训练的兴趣。当言语质量下降时,大多数成年人都能受益于看到说话者;然而,这种效果的大小与他们的唇读能力有关,而对于那些在大部分生命中都经历过正常听力的成年人来说,他们的唇读能力通常很差。唇读训练一直被视为成人获得性听力损失康复的一种可能途径,但大多数训练方法都不是特别成功。在这里,我们描述了唇读和基于理论的训练方法,以及成功的训练范例。我们讨论了一些对纯听觉(AO)和视听(AV)语音识别的扩展。
描述了视觉言语感知和单词识别。概述了传统和现代的训练和感知学习观点。我们专注于外部和内部反馈以及训练任务在感知学习中的作用,并描述了唇读训练实验的结果。
唇读通常被描述为仅限于视位感知。然而,有证据表明可以进行次视位的视觉语音信息感知。唇读单词也依赖于词汇约束,与听觉口语识别相似。已经表明,通过训练很难提高唇读能力,但在特定的反馈和任务条件下,训练可以成功,并且学习可以泛化到未训练的材料,包括噪声中的 AV 句子刺激。唇读的结果对 AO 和 AV 训练以及在面对面交流中使用声学处理的语音具有启示意义。
鉴于其在听力损失者的语音识别中的重要性,我们建议研究和临床界将唇读纳入他们改善成人获得性听力损失者语音识别的努力中。