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Neural Processing of Congruent and Incongruent Audiovisual Speech in School-Age Children and Adults

Authors :
Heikkila, Jenni
Tiippana, Kaisa
Loberg, Otto
Leppänen, Paavo H. T.
Perception Action Cognition
Department of Psychology and Logopedics
Medicum
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Seeing articulatory gestures enhances speech perception. Perception of auditory speech can even be changed by incongruent visual gestures, which is known as the McGurk effect (e.g., dubbing a voice saying /mi/ onto a face articulating /ni/, observers often hear /ni/). In children, the McGurk effect is weaker than in adults, but no previous knowledge exists about the neural-level correlates of the McGurk effect in school-age children. Using brain event-related potentials, we investigated change detection responses to congruent and incongruent audiovisual speech in school-age children and adults. We used an oddball paradigm with a congruent audiovisual /mi/ as the standard stimulus and a congruent audiovisual /ni/ or McGurk A/mi/V/ni/ as the deviant stimulus. In adults, a similar change detection response was elicited by both deviant stimuli. In children, change detection responses differed between the congruent and the McGurk stimulus. This reflects a maturational difference in the influence of visual stimuli on auditory processing.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......1593..b5b31820acf53199dffb790baf07087b