Tactual speech perception by minimally trained deaf subjects
Abstract
Research on tactual perception of speech has shown that many phonetic contrasts can be transmitted to the deaf through artificial hearing devices that stimulate the sense of touch. Past research has emphasized long-term training with tactual reception for the achievement of maximal perceptual performance. The present study demonstrates that, with a brief training period, deaf adolescents can attain a high level of perceptual peformance with a tactual speech system in discrimination of certain hard-to-lipread word pairs pronounced by both a male and a female speaker. Thus some speech sounds previously indistinguishable by the deaf people can be immediately available for speech comprehension through the tactual vocoder; and other speech sounds will be recognized with further training. The reason that some contrasts are learned quickly and others require extensive training may be found in a pattern perception postulate proposed by Gavin (1979): word patterns that result in stimulation across a greater area of skin tend to be more discriminable than word patterns which stimulate only small areas of the skin.
Publication Title
Journal of Speech and Hearing Research
Recommended Citation
Oller, D., Payne, S., & Gavin, W. (1980). Tactual speech perception by minimally trained deaf subjects. Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 23 (4), 769-778. https://doi.org/10.1044/jshr.2304.769