The present article reports on one experiment designed to examine the importance of familiarity when processing vocal identity. A voice sorting task was used with participants who were either personally familiar or unfamiliar with three speakers. The results suggested that familiarity supported both an ability to tell different instances of the same voice together, and to tell similar instances of different voices apart. In addition, the results suggested differences between the three speakers in terms of the extent to which they were confusable, underlining the importance of vocal characteristics and stimulus selection within behavioural tasks. The results are discussed with reference to existing debates regarding the nature of stored repr...
Unimodal and cross-modal information provided by faces and voices contribute to identity percepts. T...
Two experiments are presented which explore the presence of a distinctiveness advantage when recogni...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...
We investigated the effects of two types of task instructions on performance on a voice sorting task...
International audienceThe ability to recognize an individual from their voice is a widespread abilit...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Vocal identity processing depends on the ability to tell apart two instances of different speakers w...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Familiar and unfamiliar voice perception are often understood as being distinct from each other. For...
iii Millions of different people talk to each other, and no two people sound exactly the same. Yet, ...
Face and voice are two preeminent physical cues describing a person. In unimodal face studies, faces...
Several studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in memory. ...
Previous research suggests that familiarity with a voice can afford benefits for voice and speech pe...
AbstractSeveral studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in ...
The current study investigated the effect of familiarity with the voice and face of a talker on a su...
Unimodal and cross-modal information provided by faces and voices contribute to identity percepts. T...
Two experiments are presented which explore the presence of a distinctiveness advantage when recogni...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...
We investigated the effects of two types of task instructions on performance on a voice sorting task...
International audienceThe ability to recognize an individual from their voice is a widespread abilit...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Vocal identity processing depends on the ability to tell apart two instances of different speakers w...
Identity sorting tasks, in which participants sort multiple naturally varying stimuli of usually two...
Familiar and unfamiliar voice perception are often understood as being distinct from each other. For...
iii Millions of different people talk to each other, and no two people sound exactly the same. Yet, ...
Face and voice are two preeminent physical cues describing a person. In unimodal face studies, faces...
Several studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in memory. ...
Previous research suggests that familiarity with a voice can afford benefits for voice and speech pe...
AbstractSeveral studies have provided evidence in favour of a norm-based representation of faces in ...
The current study investigated the effect of familiarity with the voice and face of a talker on a su...
Unimodal and cross-modal information provided by faces and voices contribute to identity percepts. T...
Two experiments are presented which explore the presence of a distinctiveness advantage when recogni...
We can recognize familiar people by their voices, and familiar talkers are more intelligible than un...