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The McGurk effect in the time of pandemic: Age-dependent adaptation to an environmental loss of visual speech cues.
Chládková, Katerina; Podlipský, Václav Jonás; Nudga, Natalia; Simácková, Sárka.
  • Chládková K; Institute of Psychology, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic. katerina.chladkova@ff.cuni.cz.
  • Podlipský VJ; Institute of Czech Language and Theory of Communication, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Nám. Jana Palacha 2, 116 38, Praha, Czech Republic. katerina.chladkova@ff.cuni.cz.
  • Nudga N; Department of English and American Studies, Faculty of Arts, Palacký University, Olomouc, Czech Republic.
  • Simácková S; Institute of Phonetics, Faculty of Arts, Charles University, Praha, Czech Republic.
Psychon Bull Rev ; 28(3): 992-1002, 2021 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1319758
ABSTRACT
Seeing a person's mouth move for [ga] while hearing [ba] often results in the perception of "da." Such audiovisual integration of speech cues, known as the McGurk effect, is stable within but variable across individuals. When the visual or auditory cues are degraded, due to signal distortion or the perceiver's sensory impairment, reliance on cues via the impoverished modality decreases. This study tested whether cue-reliance adjustments due to exposure to reduced cue availability are persistent and transfer to subsequent perception of speech with all cues fully available. A McGurk experiment was administered at the beginning and after a month of mandatory face-mask wearing (enforced in Czechia during the 2020 pandemic). Responses to audio-visually incongruent stimuli were analyzed from 292 persons (ages 16-55), representing a cross-sectional sample, and 41 students (ages 19-27), representing a longitudinal sample. The extent to which the participants relied exclusively on visual cues was affected by testing time in interaction with age. After a month of reduced access to lipreading, reliance on visual cues (present at test) somewhat lowered for younger and increased for older persons. This implies that adults adapt their speech perception faculty to an altered environmental availability of multimodal cues, and that younger adults do so more efficiently. This finding demonstrates that besides sensory impairment or signal noise, which reduce cue availability and thus affect audio-visual cue reliance, having experienced a change in environmental conditions can modulate the perceiver's (otherwise relatively stable) general bias towards different modalities during speech communication.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Speech Perception / Adaptation, Physiological / Cues / Facial Recognition / Lipreading / Masks Type of study: Experimental Studies / Observational study / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Adolescent / Adult / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged / Young adult Language: English Journal: Psychon Bull Rev Journal subject: Psychology Year: 2021 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S13423-020-01852-2

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Speech Perception / Adaptation, Physiological / Cues / Facial Recognition / Lipreading / Masks Type of study: Experimental Studies / Observational study / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Adolescent / Adult / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged / Young adult Language: English Journal: Psychon Bull Rev Journal subject: Psychology Year: 2021 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S13423-020-01852-2