Abstract

We perceive identity, expression and speech from faces. While perception of identity and expression depends crucially on the configuration of facial features it is less clear whether this holds for visual speech perception.Facial configuration is poorly perceived for upside-down faces as demonstrated by the Thatcher illusion in which the orientation of the eyes and mouth with respect to the face is inverted (Thatcherization). This gives the face a grotesque appearance but this is only seen when the face is upright.Thatcherization can likewise disrupt visual speech perception but only when the face is upright indicating that facial configuration can be important for visual speech perception. This effect can propagate to auditory speech perception through audiovisual integration so that Thatcherization disrupts the McGurk illusion in which visual speech perception alters perception of an incongruent acoustic phoneme. This is known as the McThatcher effect.Here we show that the McThatcher effect is reflected in the McGurk mismatch negativity (MMN). The MMN is an event-related potential elicited by a change in auditory perception. The McGurk-MMN can be elicited by a change in auditory perception due to the McGurk illusion without any change in the acoustic stimulus.We found that Thatcherization disrupted a strong McGurk illusion and a correspondingly strong McGurk-MMN only for upright faces. This confirms that facial configuration can be important for audiovisual speech perception. For inverted faces we found a weaker McGurk illusion but, surprisingly, no MMN. We also found no correlation between the strength of the McGurk illusion and the amplitude of the McGurk-MMN. We suggest that this may be due to a threshold effect so that a strong McGurk illusion is required to elicit the McGurk-MMN.

Highlights

  • Face perception has three important functions: face recognition, perception of facial expression and visual speech perception

  • We found that Thatcherization disrupted a strong McGurk illusion and a correspondingly strong McGurkMMN only for upright faces

  • Deterred by this variability, we found the motivation for the current study in the power and usefulness of the McThatcher effect for investigating the relation between encoding of facial configuration and perception of audiovisual speech

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Summary

Introduction

Face perception has three important functions: face recognition, perception of facial expression and visual speech perception (cf. Bruce and Young, 2012). Interesting because of the effect that automatic, subconscious speech reading has on auditory speech perception in face-to-face conversation. The resulting, illusory auditory percept may represent a combination of the incongruent acoustic and visual stimuli (e.g. acoustic /ga/þ visual /ba/ producing an illusory percept /bga/). The automaticity and robustness of the McGurk effect is in stark contrast to the difficulty with which untrained observers speech read (Walden et al, 1977).

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