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Seeing the visual articulatory movements of a speaker, while hearing their voice, helps with understanding what is said. This multisensory enhancement is particularly evident in noisy listening conditions. Multisensory enhancement also occurs even in auditory-only conditions: auditory-only speech and voice-identity recognition are superior for speakers previously learned with their face, compared to control learning; an effect termed the "face-benefit." Whether the face-benefit can assist in maintaining robust perception in increasingly noisy listening conditions, similar to concurrent multisensory input, is unknown. Here, in two behavioural experiments, we examined this hypothesis. In each experiment, participants learned a series of speakers' voices together with their dynamic face or control image. Following learning, participants listened to auditory-only sentences spoken by the same speakers and recognised the content of the sentences (speech recognition, Experiment 1) or the voice-identity of the speaker (Experiment 2) in increasing levels of auditory noise. For speech recognition, we observed that 14 of 30 participants (47%) showed a face-benefit. 19 of 25 participants (76%) showed a face-benefit for voice-identity recognition. For those participants who demonstrated a face-benefit, the face-benefit increased with auditory noise levels. Taken together, the results support an audio-visual model of auditory communication and suggest that the brain can develop a flexible system in which learned facial characteristics are used to deal with varying auditory uncertainty.
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Corrina Maguinness
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Sonja Schall
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Brian Mathias
University of Aberdeen
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
University of Aberdeen
Technische Universität Dresden
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
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Maguinness et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e5b5efb6db64358754e5ed — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/17470218241278649