PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

'Read my lips' – it’s easier when they're your own

Study investigates how we learn to recognize and produce speech

2012-11-08
(Press-News.org) People can lip-read themselves better than they can lip-read others, according to a new study by Nancy Tye-Murray and colleagues from Washington University. Their work, which explores the link between speech perception and speech production, is published online in Springer's Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.

Most people cannot read lips - just try watching television with the sound turned off and see how much of a news item you understand. If you see someone speak a sentence without the accompanying sounds, you are unlikely to recognize many words.

Tye-Murray and her team developed simple, nonsensical sentences from word boards e.g. The duck watched the boy and The snail watched the goose, so that participants would easily identify and recognize individual words. Twenty adults recorded the sentences and, after several weeks, lip-read silent video clips with sentences spoken both by themselves and by nine other participants.

Participants were able to lip-read video clips of themselves consistently more accurately than video clips of others. These findings suggest that seeing someone speak activates speech processes that link 'seen' words to 'actual' words in the mental lexicon, and the activation is particularly strong when you see yourself speak.

The authors conclude: "This study is one of the first to show that not only can people recognize their own actions from those of others, but they can better interpret their own actions. A strong link may exist between how we perform actions and how we perceive actions; that is, we may activate some of the very same mental representations when performing and when perceiving. These findings have important implications for understanding how we learn new actions and, particularly, for how we learn to recognize and produce speech."

###Reference Tye-Murray N et al (2012). Reading your own lips: common-coding theory and visual speech perception. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review; DOI 10.3758/s13423-012-0328-5

The full-text article is available to journalists on request.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Report: Cleanup of some contaminated groundwater sites unlikely for decades

2012-11-08
WASHINGTON — At least 126,000 sites across the U.S. have contaminated groundwater that requires remediation, and about 10 percent of these sites are considered "complex," meaning restoration is unlikely to be achieved in the next 50 to 100 years due to technological limitations, says a new report from the National Research Council. The report adds that the estimated cost of complete cleanup at these sites ranges from $110 billion to $127 billion, but the figures for both the number of sites and costs are likely underestimates. Several national and state groundwater cleanup ...

Learning who's the top dog: Study reveals how the brain stores information about social rank

2012-11-08
Researchers supported by the Wellcome Trust have discovered that we use a different part of our brain to learn about social hierarchies than we do to learn ordinary information. The study provides clues as to how this information is stored in memory and also reveals that you can tell a lot about how good somebody is likely to be at judging social rank by looking at the structure of their brain. Primates (and people) are remarkably good at ranking each other within social hierarchies, a survival technique that helps us to avoid conflict and select advantageous allies. ...

Teleconcussion--A new, innovative strategy for assessing young athletes

2012-11-08
New Rochelle, NY, November 8, 2012—Concussion is a common disorder estimated to affect no fewer than 1.7-3.8 million people in the U.S. each year. Many more people with concussion likely do not seek medical care for symptoms of concussion and may suffer long-lasting, progressive, and profoundcognitive, psychiatric, and neurologic effects. The first use of teleconcussion, a novel solution for management and follow-up of a concussed athlete with remote access technology, is described in an article published in Telemedicine and e-Health, a peer-reviewed journal from Mary Ann ...

Parents talking to their teens about being overweight

2012-11-08
Philadelphia, PA, November 8, 2012 – According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 28% of adolescents are overweight. This means that about 1 in every 5 parents is thinking about how to discuss this with their child. Creating a healthful home environment, modeling healthful behaviors, and providing encouragement and support to adolescents for positive behavior changes may be more effective than communicating with adolescents about weight-related topics, according to a new study released in the November/December 2012 issue of the Journal of Nutrition ...

Testing pain killers on humans could save money and speed the arrival of new drugs

2012-11-08
Deliberately inflicting carefully controlled painful stimuli on human volunteers and seeing how well specific drugs reduce the feeling of pain can be an effective way of testing new drugs. So conclude two researchers who reviewed the available literature on these types of tests in a paper published in the British Journal of Pharmacology. Pain is important. It acts as an alarm mechanism, warning us that something is about to cause physical damage. It could be triggered by something physical like a cut or bruise, or a temperature driven stimulus such as extreme heat or ...

New, improved mouse model of human Alzheimer's may enable drug discovery

2012-11-08
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine have developed a transgenic mouse that carries a human gene known to increase risk of Alzheimer's 15-fold. This new mouse mimics the genetics of the human disease more closely than any of the dozen existing mouse models and may prove more useful in the development of candidate drugs to prevent or treat the disease. The new mouse model provides new evidence for the earliest cause of Alzheimer's, researchers report in a study to be published in the December issue of the Journal of Biological Chemistry ...

MicroRNAs in plants: Regulation of the regulator

MicroRNAs in plants: Regulation of the regulator
2012-11-08
This press release is available in German. MicroRNAs are essential regulators of the genetic program in multicellular organisms. Because of their potent effects, the production of these small regulators has itself to be tightly controlled. That is the key finding of a new study performed by Tübingen scientists at the Max Planck Institute for Developmental Biology. They identified a new component that modulates the production of micro RNAs in thale cress, Arabidopsis thaliana, by the removal of phosphate residues from a micro RNA-biogenesis enzyme. This can be as ...

Examining Debt in Florida

2012-11-08
Florida residents know firsthand how devastating this most recent recession has been. While the economy is showing some positive signs, many Floridians are still not seeing these benefits. With unemployment remaining high, and home values struggling to rebound, many individuals throughout the state are experiencing debt problems. In fact, the debt that some residents are experiencing is actually much higher than the national average. A recent study by Credit Karma, a consumer website, examined the debt of South Floridians to learn more about the extent of debt within ...

New Florida Drug Scheduling Laws Target Synthetics

2012-11-08
Synthetic drugs such as bath salts, K2, spice, incense and potpourri have been gaining popularity in recent years. Authorities have responded by cracking down on the production and sale of such substances. On March 23, 2012, Florida Gov. Rick Scott signed H.B. 1175 into law, greatly expanding the number of controlled substances under state law. Local governments have also enacted bans of the sale of synthetic drugs. Some say that the laws do not go far enough, but others are highly critical of the laws. New Substances Made Illegal The new law adds 90 substances to ...

Filing Pennsylvania Workplace Discrimination Complaints Just Got Easier

2012-11-08
The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) recently revealed several modifications to the process of submitting workplace discrimination complaints. The revamped process is designed to be more user-friendly, flexible and efficient than the former method. The more efficient process will make all aspects of a complaint easier, including everything from filing to processing and from determinations to appeals. How does the process work now? Under the current system, an EEOC complaint begins when an employee or applicant asserts discrimination and contacts ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Rethinking stroke risk in patients with atherosclerotic carotid stenosis

New approach makes AI adaptable for computer vision in crop breeding

Moffitt Cancer Center launches new podcast, The ImmunoVerse, hosted by CEO Dr. Patrick Hwu

Evidence blasted into space: Mystery why some meteorites look less shocked solved

Immune system warriors predict the future of autoimmune blood vessel disease

Canadian experts urge protection for children from escalating heat in schools and child care settings

Awkward. Humans are still better than AI at reading the room

No more copy-pasting: DNA base editing for better Lactobacillus strains

AI provides reliable answers with less computational overhead

‘System rife with blame’ could threaten parents’ mental health when their kids struggle with school attendance

Nature positive: lots of rhetoric, little reality

Breakthrough approach for diagnosing TB could significantly improve detection

New era of aid cuts and conflict threatens educational lifeline of youngest learners

World Hormone Day 2025 – global endocrine community unites to raise public awareness of the small steps everyone can take towards good hormone health

Daily doses of peanuts tackle allergic reactions in adults

Herpes zoster vaccination and dementia occurrence

UTEP launches artificial intelligence think tank to address regional challenges

Sun earns UTA's highest research honor

Association for Chemoreception Sciences (AChemS) 47th Annual Meeting

Age-related genetic changes in the blood associated with poor cancer prognosis

Atomic imaging and AI offer new insights into motion of parasite behind sleeping sickness

Maternal childhood trauma may lead to early metabolic changes in male children

Helping computers perceive and interact with the visual world

New precision mental health care approach for depression addresses unique patient needs

Metabolic syndrome linked to increased risk of young-onset dementia

Hotter temps trigger wetlands to emit more methane as microbes struggle to keep up

ATP prevents harmful aggregation of proteins associated with Parkinson’s and ALS

Water quality could be degraded by development and conversion of forests upstream, with sediment levels and nitrogen concentrations also worsened, per modelling analysis of the Middle Chattahoochee wa

The antibiotic that takes the bite out of Lyme

Post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome may be driven by remnants of infection

[Press-News.org] 'Read my lips' – it’s easier when they're your own
Study investigates how we learn to recognize and produce speech