Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evidence that seeing and hearing ourselves rather than someone else may lead to visual (i.e., lip-read) or auditory “self” advantages. We assessed whether there is a “self” advantage for phonetic recalibration (a lip-read driven cross-modal learning effect) and selective adaptation (a contrastive effect in the opposite direction of recalibration). We observed both aftereffects as well as an on-line effect of lip-read information on auditory perception (i.e., immediate capture), but there was no evidence for a “self” advantage in any of the tasks (as additionally supported by Bayesian statistics). These findings strengthen the emerging notion that ...
Park H, Kayser C, Thut G, Gross J. Lip movements entrain the observers' low-frequency brain oscillat...
This study investigated whether communication modality affects talkers’ speech adaptation to an inte...
Speech perception often benefits from vision of the speaker's lip movements when they are available....
Published: 22 March 2019.Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other peopl...
Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evide...
Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evide...
Recently, we have shown that lipread speech can recalibrate auditory speech identification when ther...
When listeners experience difficulty in understanding a speaker, lexical and audiovisual (or lipread...
When speech perception is difficult, one way listeners adjust is by reconfiguring phoneme category b...
Published online: 25 April 2018Perception of vocal affect is influenced by the concurrent sight of a...
Exposure to incongruent auditory and visual speech produces both visual recalibration and selective ...
Are sight and sound out of synch? Signs that they are have been dismissed for over two centuries as ...
Research suggests that selective adaptation in speech is a low-level process dependent on sensory-sp...
Purpose Visual cues from a speaker's face may benefit perceptual adaptation to degraded speech, but ...
Article first published online: January 13, 2020Humans quickly adapt to variations in the speech sig...
Park H, Kayser C, Thut G, Gross J. Lip movements entrain the observers' low-frequency brain oscillat...
This study investigated whether communication modality affects talkers’ speech adaptation to an inte...
Speech perception often benefits from vision of the speaker's lip movements when they are available....
Published: 22 March 2019.Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other peopl...
Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evide...
Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evide...
Recently, we have shown that lipread speech can recalibrate auditory speech identification when ther...
When listeners experience difficulty in understanding a speaker, lexical and audiovisual (or lipread...
When speech perception is difficult, one way listeners adjust is by reconfiguring phoneme category b...
Published online: 25 April 2018Perception of vocal affect is influenced by the concurrent sight of a...
Exposure to incongruent auditory and visual speech produces both visual recalibration and selective ...
Are sight and sound out of synch? Signs that they are have been dismissed for over two centuries as ...
Research suggests that selective adaptation in speech is a low-level process dependent on sensory-sp...
Purpose Visual cues from a speaker's face may benefit perceptual adaptation to degraded speech, but ...
Article first published online: January 13, 2020Humans quickly adapt to variations in the speech sig...
Park H, Kayser C, Thut G, Gross J. Lip movements entrain the observers' low-frequency brain oscillat...
This study investigated whether communication modality affects talkers’ speech adaptation to an inte...
Speech perception often benefits from vision of the speaker's lip movements when they are available....