Discriminating speech rhythms in audition, vision, and touch.

Acta Psychol (Amst)

Crossmodal Research Laboratory, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, UK.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored how well people can distinguish between languages based on rhythmic patterns, specifically looking at English and Japanese.
  • It tested various sensory modes: auditory, visual, both together, and tactile (touch), finding that people could discriminate languages effectively using these methods, especially auditory cues.
  • The final findings suggest that it's possible to identify speech rhythms through visual and tactile means, but auditory discrimination remains the most effective.

Article Abstract

We investigated the extent to which people can discriminate between languages on the basis of their characteristic temporal, rhythmic information, and the extent to which this ability generalizes across sensory modalities. We used rhythmical patterns derived from the alternation of vowels and consonants in English and Japanese, presented in audition, vision, both audition and vision at the same time, or touch. Experiment 1 confirmed that discrimination is possible on the basis of auditory rhythmic patterns, and extended it to the case of vision, using 'aperture-close' mouth movements of a schematic face. In Experiment 2, language discrimination was demonstrated using visual and auditory materials that did not resemble spoken articulation. In a combined analysis including data from Experiments 1 and 2, a beneficial effect was also found when the auditory rhythmic information was available to participants. Despite the fact that discrimination could be achieved using vision alone, auditory performance was nevertheless better. In a final experiment, we demonstrate that the rhythm of speech can also be discriminated successfully by means of vibrotactile patterns delivered to the fingertip. The results of the present study therefore demonstrate that discrimination between language's syllabic rhythmic patterns is possible on the basis of visual and tactile displays.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2014.05.021DOI Listing

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