| J. Driver. Enhancement of selective listening by illusory mislocation of speech sounds due to lip-reading. Nature, 381:66--68, 1996. |
....in the psychophysical community as the ventriloquism e ect, de ned as a mislocation of sounds toward their apparent visual source. The e ect is robust in a wide variety of conditions, and has been found to be strongly dependent on the degree of synchrony between the auditory and visual signals (Driver, 1996; Bertelson, Vroomen, Wiegeraad de Gelder, 1994) To whom correspondence should be addressed. The ventriloquism e ect is in fact less speech speci c than rst thought. For example the e ect is not disrupted by an upside down lip signal (Bertelson, Vroomen, Wiegeraad de Gelder, 1994) and ....
Driver, J. (1996). Enhancement of selective listening by illusory mislocation of speech sounds due to lip-reading. Nature, 381, 66-68.
....supported by European Commission Network TMR ERBFMRXCT970150 (SPHEAR) in the auditory and visual signals. However, a recent study involving two simultaneous speakers has demonstrated that seeing the lip movements of speaker A can increase the intelligibility of an unseen speaker B (Driver, 1996 [2]) This result lies outside the scope of this simple model of audio visual integration. In this paper we propose the existence of a module that performs what may be termed audio visual scene analysis (AVSA) In this module a correspondence is formed between the auditory and visual representations ....
J. Driver. Enhancement of selective listening by illusory mislocation of speech sounds due to lip-reading. Nature, 381:66--68, 1996.
No context found.
J. Driver. Enhancement of selective listening by illusory mislocation of speech sounds due to lip-reading. Nature, 381:66--68, 1996.
No context found.
J. Driver, "Enhancement of selective listening by illusory mislocation of speech sounds due to lip-reading," Nature, vol. 381, no. 6577, pp. 66--68, May 1996.
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