PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Compensations to auditory feedback perturbations in congenitally blind and sighted speakers: Acoustic and articulatory data.

  • Pamela Trudeau-Fisette,
  • Mark Tiede,
  • Lucie Ménard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180300
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7
p. e0180300

Abstract

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This study investigated the effects of visual deprivation on the relationship between speech perception and production by examining compensatory responses to real-time perturbations in auditory feedback. Specifically, acoustic and articulatory data were recorded while sighted and congenitally blind French speakers produced several repetitions of the vowel /ø/. At the acoustic level, blind speakers produced larger compensatory responses to altered vowels than their sighted peers. At the articulatory level, blind speakers also produced larger displacements of the upper lip, the tongue tip, and the tongue dorsum in compensatory responses. These findings suggest that blind speakers tolerate less discrepancy between actual and expected auditory feedback than sighted speakers. The study also suggests that sighted speakers have acquired more constrained somatosensory goals through the influence of visual cues perceived in face-to-face conversation, leading them to tolerate less discrepancy between expected and altered articulatory positions compared to blind speakers and thus resulting in smaller observed compensatory responses.