Audiovisual speech perception in children with autism spectrum disorders
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Irwin, Julia R. (Author)
- Avery, T (Author)
- Kleinman, D (Author)
- Landi, N (Author)
Title
Audiovisual speech perception in children with autism spectrum disorders
Abstract
In face-to-face conversation, when a speaker talks, the outcome of their speech can both be heard (audio) and seen (visual). We employed a novel visual phonemic restoration paradigm to assess neural signatures (event related potentials [ERPs]) of audiovisual processing in typically developing children and in children with ASD. During EEG recording, two types of auditory stimuli were alternately presented with video of a speaker saying the consonant-vowel syllable /ba/: 1) a synthesized consonant-vowel syllable /ba/ or 2) a synthesized syllable derived from /ba/ in which auditory cues for the consonant are substantially weakened, such that it sounds more like /a/. The auditory stimuli are easily discriminable, however, in the context of a visual /ba/, the auditory /a/ is typically perceived as /ba/, producing a visual phonemic restoration. In an ERP context, we have shown that this restoration leads to an attenuated phoneme discrimination response in an active task in typical adults and children. To explore the hypothesis that children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have atypical AV speech integration under pre-attentive processing conditions, we tested whether children with ASD would show a reduction in this restoration effect under passive listening conditions. Indeed, in this task, children with ASD showed a large /ba/-/a/ discrimination response, even in the presence of a speaker producing /ba/, suggesting reduced influence of visual speech. © 2019 Proceedings of the International Congress on Acoustics. All rights reserved.
Proceedings Title
PROCEEDINGS of the 23rd International Congress on Acoustics
Conference Name
ICA 2019 Aachen
Publisher
Instiute of Technical Acoustics
Place
Aachen, Germany
Date
2019
Volume
2019-September
Pages
3876-3882
ISBN
978-3-939296-15-7
Citation Key
irwinAudiovisualSpeechPerception2019
Language
en
Library Catalog
Google Scholar
Citation
Irwin, J. R., Avery, T., Kleinman, D., & Landi, N. (2019). Audiovisual speech perception in children with autism spectrum disorders. PROCEEDINGS of the 23rd International Congress on Acoustics, 2019-September, 3876–3882. https://doi.org/10.18154/RWTH-CONV-238929
Link to this record