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Communication Dans Un Congrès Année : 2018

Investigating the Role of Familiar Face and Voice Cues in Speech Processing in Noise

Résumé

The speech of a familiar talker is better recognized in noise than an unfamiliar one, suggesting that listeners access talker- specific models to assist with degraded input. This study investigated whether a talker model could be accessed by presenting the face of a talker. In the experiment, participants were trained in recognizing three talkers’ faces and voices to ceiling-level. Participants were then given a speech in noise recognition task consisting of four talker conditions: familiar face then familiar voice; unfamiliar face then familiar voice, familiar face then unfamiliar voice; and unfamiliar face then unfamiliar voice. A talker familiarity effect was found, i.e., speech perception was more accurate in the familiar face and familiar voice condition than all other ones. A familiar voice did not produce a talker familiarity effect when paired with an unfamiliar face. The familiar face and unfamiliar voice condition had the poorest performance, indicating that pairing a familiar face and unfamiliar voice had a disruptive effect. The results suggest that listeners develop a talker model that includes details of both the voice and the face; and that accessing this model can in some circumstances be wholly determined by face cues
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Dates et versions

hal-02067712 , version 1 (14-03-2019)

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Citer

Jeesun Kim, Sonya Karisma, Vincent Aubanel, Chris Davis. Investigating the Role of Familiar Face and Voice Cues in Speech Processing in Noise. Interspeech 2018 - 19th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association, Sep 2018, Hyderabad, India. pp.2276-2279, ⟨10.21437/Interspeech.2018-1812⟩. ⟨hal-02067712⟩
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