The effect of face orientation on audiovisual speech integration in infancy: An electrophysiological study

Author:

Szmytke Magdalena1ORCID,Ilyka Dianna2,Duda‐Goławska Joanna3,Laudańska Zuzanna3ORCID,Malinowska‐Korczak Anna3,Tomalski Przemysław3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Psychology University of Warsaw Warsaw Poland

2. Department of Psychology University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

3. Neurocognitive Development Lab, Institute of Psychology Polish Academy of Sciences Warsaw Poland

Abstract

AbstractHumans pay special attention to faces and speech from birth, but the interplay of developmental processes leading to specialization is poorly understood. We investigated the effects of face orientation on audiovisual (AV) speech perception in two age groups of infants (younger: 5‐ to 6.5‐month‐olds; older: 9‐ to 10.5‐month‐olds) and adults. We recorded event‐related potentials (ERP) in response to videos of upright and inverted faces producing /ba/ articulation dubbed with auditory syllables that were either matching /ba/ or mismatching /ga/ the mouth movement. We observed an increase in the amplitude of audiovisual mismatch response (AVMMR) to incongruent visual /ba/‐auditory /ga/ syllable in comparison to other stimuli in younger infants, while the older group of infants did not show a similar response. AV mismatch response to inverted visual /ba/‐auditory /ga/ stimulus relative to congruent stimuli was also detected in the right frontal areas in the younger group and the left and right frontal areas in adults. We show that face configuration affects the neural response to AV mismatch differently across all age groups. The novel finding of the AVMMR in response to inverted incongruent AV speech may potentially imply the featural face processing in younger infants and adults when processing inverted faces articulating incongruent speech. The lack of visible differential responses to upright and inverted incongruent stimuli obtained in the older group of infants suggests a likely functional cortical reorganization in the processing of AV speech.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Developmental Biology,Developmental Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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