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Older and younger adults' identification of sentences filtered with amplitude and frequency modulations in quiet and noise
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Effects of type of agreement violation and utterance position on the auditory processing of subject-verb agreement : an ERP study
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Complexity, training paradigm design, and the contribution of memory subsystems to grammar learning
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Attenuation of auditory evoked potentials for hand and eye-initiated sounds
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Identifying visual prosody : where do people look?
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Abstract:
Talkers produce different types of spoken prosody by varying acoustic cues (e.g., F0, duration, and amplitude), also making complementary head and face movements (visual prosody). Perceivers can categorise auditory and visual prosodic expressions at high levels of accuracy. Research using eye-tracking trained participants to recognise the visual prosody of two-word sentences and found that the upper face is more critical for determining prosody than the lower face. However, recent studies using longer sentences have shown that untrained perceivers can match lower and upper faces across modalities. Given these, we aimed to extend the eye-tracking research by examining the gaze patterns of untrained participants when judging prosody with longer utterances. Twelve participants were presented questions, narrowly focussed, or broad focussed (neutral) utterances for a 3 alternative forced-choice identification task while eye gaze was recorded. Identification accuracy was high (81-97%) and did not differ among expression types. Participants gazed at eye regions longer and more often than mouth regions for all expressions. They gazed less at the mouth region for questions than for broad and narrow focussed statements. These results are consistent with the early research indicating the importance of the upper face for determining visual prosody.
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Keyword:
170112 - Sensory Processes; gaze; Perception and Performance; visual perception
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URL: http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:36100 http://sites.bu.edu/speechprosody2016/
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Articulatory constraints on spontaneous entrainment between speech and manual gesture
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The perceptual assimilation of Danish monophthongs and diphthongs by monolingual Australian English speakers
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Perception of English codas in various phonological and morphological contexts by Mandarin learners of English
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Influences of visual speech information on the perception of foreign-accented speech in noise
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The effect of seeing the interlocutor on auditory and visual speech production in noise
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Poor phonetic perceivers are affected by cognitive load when resolving talker variability (L)
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Visual vs. auditory emotion information : how language and culture affect our bias towards the different modalities
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Auditory-visual augmentation of Thai lexical tone perception in the elderly
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Syllabic structure and informational content in English and Spanish
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The effect of auditory and visual signal availability on speech perception
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The effect of intensified language exposure on accommodating talker variability
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