Speechreading sentences with single-channel vibrotactile presentation of voice fundamental frequency

The main goal of this study was to investigate the efficacy of four vibrotactile speechreading supplements. Three supplements provided single-channel encodings of fundamental frequency (F0). Two encodings involved scaling and shifting glottal pulses to pulse rate ranges suited to tactual sensing cap...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 1990-09, Vol.88 (3), p.1274-1285
Hauptverfasser: EBERHARDT, S. P, BERNSTEIN, L. E, DEMOREST, M. E, GOLDSTEIN, M. H
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container_title The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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creator EBERHARDT, S. P
BERNSTEIN, L. E
DEMOREST, M. E
GOLDSTEIN, M. H
description The main goal of this study was to investigate the efficacy of four vibrotactile speechreading supplements. Three supplements provided single-channel encodings of fundamental frequency (F0). Two encodings involved scaling and shifting glottal pulses to pulse rate ranges suited to tactual sensing capabilities; the third transformed F0 to differential amplitude of two fixed-frequency sinewaves. The fourth supplement added to one of the F0 encodings a second vibrator indicating high-frequency speech energy. A second goal was to develop improved methods for experimental control. Therefore, a sentence corpus was recorded on videodisc using two talkers whose speech was captured by video, microphone, and electroglottograph. Other experimental control issues included use of visual-alone control subjects, a multiple-baseline, single-subject design replicated for each of 15 normal-hearing subjects, sentence and syllable pre- and post-tests balanced for difficulty, and a speechreading screening test for subject selection. Across 17 h of treatment and 5 h of visual-alone baseline testing, each subject performed open-set sentence identification. Covariance analyses showed that the single-channel supplements provided a small but significant benefit, whereas the two-channel supplement was not effective. All subjects improved in visual-alone speechreading and maintained individual differences across the experiment. Vibrotactile benefit did not depend on speechreading ability.
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source MEDLINE; AIP Acoustical Society of America
subjects Adult
Attention
Biological and medical sciences
Combined Modality Therapy
Communication Aids for Disabled
Deafness - rehabilitation
Equipment Design
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Hearing Aids
Humans
Lipreading
Male
Perception
Phonetics
Psychoacoustics
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Tactile perception
Touch
Vibration
title Speechreading sentences with single-channel vibrotactile presentation of voice fundamental frequency
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