Visual speech segmentation: using facial cues to locate word boundaries in continuous speech.

Aaron D Mitchel, Daniel J Weiss
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Abstract

Speech is typically a multimodal phenomenon, yet few studies have focused on the exclusive contributions of visual cues to language acquisition. To address this gap, we investigated whether visual prosodic information can facilitate speech segmentation. Previous research has demonstrated that language learners can use lexical stress and pitch cues to segment speech and that learners can extract this information from talking faces. Thus, we created an artificial speech stream that contained minimal segmentation cues and paired it with two synchronous facial displays in which visual prosody was either informative or uninformative for identifying word boundaries. Across three familiarisation conditions (audio stream alone, facial streams alone, and paired audiovisual), learning occurred only when the facial displays were informative to word boundaries, suggesting that facial cues can help learners solve the early challenges of language acquisition.

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视觉语音分割:利用面部线索定位连续语音中的单词边界
语音是一种典型的多模态现象,但很少有研究关注视觉线索对语言习得的独特贡献。为了填补这一空白,我们研究了视觉前音信息是否能促进语音分段。以往的研究表明,语言学习者可以使用词汇重音和音高线索来分割语音,而且学习者可以从说话的面孔中提取这种信息。因此,我们创建了一个包含最少分段线索的人工语音流,并将其与两个同步面部显示配对,其中视觉前音对识别单词边界有或无帮助。在三种熟悉条件下(单独的音频流、单独的面部流和配对的视听),只有当面部显示对单词边界有提示作用时,学习才会发生,这表明面部提示可以帮助学习者解决语言习得的早期难题。
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