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The effect of visual cues on top-down restoration of temporally interrupted speech, with and without further degradations

Authors :
Michel Ruben Benard
Deniz Başkent
Perceptual and Cognitive Neuroscience (PCN)
​Robotics and image-guided minimally-invasive surgery (ROBOTICS)
Source :
Hearing Research, 328, 24-33. ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

In complex listening situations, cognitive restoration mechanisms are commonly used to enhance perception of degraded speech with inaudible segments. Profoundly hearing-impaired people with a cochlear implant (Cl) show less benefit from such mechanisms. However, both normal hearing (NH) listeners and CI users do benefit from visual speech cues in these listening situations. In this study we investigated if an accompanying video of the speaker can enhance the intelligibility of interrupted sentences and the phonemic restoration benefit, measured by an increase in intelligibility when the silent intervals are filled with noise. Similar to previous studies, restoration benefit was observed with interrupted speech without spectral degradations (Experiment 1), but was absent in acoustic simulations of CIs (Experiment 2) and was present again in simulations of electric-acoustic stimulation (Experiment 3). In all experiments, the additional speech information provided by the complementary visual cues lead to overall higher intelligibility, however, these cues did not influence the occurrence or extent of the phonemic restoration benefit of filler noise. Results imply that visual cues do not show a synergistic effect with the filler noise, as adding them equally increased the intelligibility of interrupted sentences with or without the filler noise. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
18785891 and 03785955
Volume :
328
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Hearing research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68e1140c3bc3d6b2c5f2955539ea56ce