Abstract

Recent studies have shown that congenitally blind speakers have greater auditory discrimination acuity than sighted speakers [Ménard, Dupont, Baum, and Aubin, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 126, 1404–1414 (2009)]. At the production level, however, blind speakers produce smaller displacements of the lips (visible articulator) than their sighted peers. In order to further investigate the impact of visual experience on the articulatory gestures used to produce intelligible speech, adaptation strategies in background noise was studied in blind and sighted speakers. Ten sighted and 10 congenitally blind adult French participants were recorded during the production of the vowels /i/, /y/, /u/, /a/ in a CVC context. Two conditions were elicited: with high-intensity noise heard through headphones and without noise. Synchronous acoustic and articulatory data were recorded using the Carstens AG500 Electromagnetic Articulograph system. Formant measures and movements of the lips and tongue were analyzed. Results reveal that blind speakers produced smaller ranges of lip movement than sighted speakers in the noisy condition, suggesting that the blind subjects made less use of visible articulators to improve intelligibility. Results are discussed in light of multimodal production-perception relationships in speech.

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