Abstract
We sought to examine the contribution of visual cues, such as lipreading, in the identification of
familiar (words) and unfamiliar (phonemes) words in terms of percent accuracy. For that purpose,
in this retrospective study, we presented lists of words and phonemes (adult female healthy voice)
in auditory (A) and audiovisual (AV) modalities to 65 Spanish normal-hearing male and female
listeners classified in four age groups. Our results showed a remarkable benefit of AV information
in word and phoneme recognition. Regarding gender, women exhibited better performance than
men in both A and AV modalities, although we only found significant differences for words but
not for phonemes. Concerning age, significant differences were detected in word recognition in
the A modality between the youngest (18–29 years old) and oldest (⩾50 years old) groups only.
We conclude visual information enhances word and phoneme recognition and women are more
influenced by visual signals than men in AV speech perception. On the contrary, it seems that,
overall, age is not a limiting factor for word recognition, with no significant differences observed
in the AV modality.
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Gómez-Vicente, V., Esquiva, G., Lancho, C., Benzerdjeb, K., Jerez, A. A., & Ausó, E. (2025). Importance of visual support through lipreading in the identification of words in spanish language. Language and speech, 68(2), 344-364.
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