Speech and non-speech audio-visual illusions: A developmental study

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Abstract

It is well known that simultaneous presentation of incongruent audio and visual stimuli can lead to illusory percepts. Recent data suggest that distinct processes underlie non-specific intersensory speech as opposed to non-speech perception. However, the development of both speech and non-speech intersensory perception across childhood and adolescence remains poorly defined. Thirty-eight observers aged 5 to 19 were tested on the McGurk effect (an audio-visual illusion involving speech), the illusory Flash effect and the Fusion effect (two audio-visual illusions not involving speech to investiqate the development or audio-visual interactions and contrast speech vs. non-speech developmental patterns. Whereas the strength of audio-visual speech illusions varied as a direct function of maturational level, performance on non-speech illusory tasks appeared to be homogeneous across all ages. These data support the existence of independent maturational processes underlying speech and non-speech audio-visual illusory effects.

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Tremblay, C., Champoux, F., Voss, P., Bacon, B. A., Lepore, F., & Théoret, H. (2007). Speech and non-speech audio-visual illusions: A developmental study. PLoS ONE, 2(8). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000742

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