Calvert G A, Bullmore E T, Brammer M J, Campbell R, Williams S C, McGuire P K, Woodruff P W, Iversen S D, David A S
Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Warneford Hospital, Oxford OX3 7JX, UK.
Science. 1997 Apr 25;276(5312):593-6. doi: 10.1126/science.276.5312.593.
Watching a speaker's lips during face-to-face conversation (lipreading) markedly improves speech perception, particularly in noisy conditions. With functional magnetic resonance imaging it was found that these linguistic visual cues are sufficient to activate auditory cortex in normal hearing individuals in the absence of auditory speech sounds. Two further experiments suggest that these auditory cortical areas are not engaged when an individual is viewing nonlinguistic facial movements but appear to be activated by silent meaningless speechlike movements (pseudospeech). This supports psycholinguistic evidence that seen speech influences the perception of heard speech at a prelexical stage.
在面对面交谈时观察说话者的嘴唇(唇读)能显著提高言语感知能力,尤其是在嘈杂环境中。通过功能磁共振成像发现,在没有听觉语音的情况下,这些语言视觉线索足以激活听力正常个体的听觉皮层。另外两项实验表明,当个体观看非语言面部动作时,这些听觉皮层区域并未被激活,但似乎会被无声的无意义言语样动作(假言语)激活。这支持了心理语言学证据,即所见言语在词汇前阶段会影响所听言语的感知。