Dept. of Cognitive Neuropsychology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
BCBL, Basque Center on Cognition, Brain, and Language, Donostia, Spain.
PLoS One. 2022 Dec 29;17(12):e0278986. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0278986. eCollection 2022.
When listening to distorted speech, does one become a better listener by looking at the face of the speaker or by reading subtitles that are presented along with the speech signal? We examined this question in two experiments in which we presented participants with spectrally distorted speech (4-channel noise-vocoded speech). During short training sessions, listeners received auditorily distorted words or pseudowords that were partially disambiguated by concurrently presented lipread information or text. After each training session, listeners were tested with new degraded auditory words. Learning effects (based on proportions of correctly identified words) were stronger if listeners had trained with words rather than with pseudowords (a lexical boost), and adding lipread information during training was more effective than adding text (a lipread boost). Moreover, the advantage of lipread speech over text training was also found when participants were tested more than a month later. The current results thus suggest that lipread speech may have surprisingly long-lasting effects on adaptation to distorted speech.
当聆听失真的语音时,通过观察说话者的面部或阅读与语音信号同时呈现的字幕,人们是否能成为更好的听众?我们在两个实验中检验了这个问题,在这两个实验中,我们向参与者呈现频谱失真的语音(4 通道噪声编码语音)。在短暂的培训过程中,听众接收听觉上失真的单词或半谐音,这些单词或半谐音通过同时呈现的唇读信息或文本得到部分澄清。在每次培训课程结束后,听众会用新的语音进行测试。如果听众使用单词而不是半谐音进行训练(词汇提升),则学习效果(基于正确识别单词的比例)会更强,而在训练中添加唇读信息比添加文本(唇读提升)更有效。此外,当参与者在一个月后接受测试时,也发现唇读语音相对于文本训练具有优势。因此,当前的结果表明,唇读语音可能对适应失真语音具有惊人的持久效果。