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Perception of the auditory-visual illusion in speech perception by children with phonological disorders
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83 |
The developmental course of lexical tone perception in the first year of life
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84 |
Multimodal perception of Mandarin tone for cochlear implant users
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85 |
Impact of language on development of auditory-visual speech perception
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86 |
The effect of spectral tilt on infants' discrimination of fricatives
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87 |
Parameters in television captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults: effects of caption rate versus text reduction on comprehension
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In: Faculty of Education - Papers (Archive) (2008)
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Parameters in television captioning for deaf and hard-of-hearing adults : effects of caption rate versus text reduction on comprehension
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89 |
Vowels and tones in infant directed speech : hyperarticulation for both, but different developmental patterns
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91 |
Rigid vs non-rigid face and head motion in phone and tone perception
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92 |
Vowels and tones in infant directed speech : hyperarticulation for both, but different developmental patterns
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93 |
Psycholinguistics meets psycholinguistics : different emphases, sustainable collaborations
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94 |
Do you speak E-NG-L-I-SH? : a comparison of foreigner- and infant-directed speech
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96 |
The effect of accurate speech production experience on the development of auditory-visual speech perception in children
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97 |
Chinese and English infants' tone perception : evidence for perceptual reorganization
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98 |
The perception and production of phones and tones : the role of rigid and non-rigid face and head motion
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Burnham, Denis K.; Reynolds, Jessica; Vatikiotis-Bateson, Eric; Yehia, Hani Camille; Ciocca, Valter; Haszard Morris, Rua; Hill, Harold; Vignali, Guillaume; Bollwerk, Sandra; Tam, Helen; Jones, Caroline. - : Brazil, UFMG, 2006
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Abstract:
There is evidence, mostly with phones (consonants & vowels), that visual concomitants of articulation facilitate speech perception. Here the visual concomitants of lexical tone are considered. In tone languages fundamental frequency variations signal lexical meaning. In a word identification experiment with auditory-visual words differing only in tone, Cantonese perceivers performed above chance in a Visual Only condition. A subsequent study showed augmentation of word pair discrimination in noise in an Auditory-Visual compared to an Auditory Only condition for Cantonese, tonal Thai speakers, and even non-tone Australian speakers). The source of this perceptual information was sought in an OPTOTRAK production study of a Cantonese speaker. Functional Data Analysis (FDA) and Principal Component (PC) extraction suggests that the salient PCs to distinguish tones involve rigid motion of the head rather than non-rigid face motion. Results of a final perception study using OPTOTRAK output in which rigid or non-rigid motion could be presented independently in tone differing or phone differing conditions, suggests that non-rigid motion is most useful for the discrimination of phones, whereas rigid motion is most useful for the discrimination of tones.
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Keyword:
170103 - Educational Psychology; facial expression; speech perception; tone (phonetics); visual perception
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URL: http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/36250
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The development of lexical tone production in Thai children, 18 months to 6 years : relationships with language milestones?
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Auditory-visual speech perception in school and preschool children
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