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The Effects of Age Upon the Visual Perception of Speech

35

Citations

10

References

1979

Year

Abstract

A sample of 110 middle-aged and geriatric subjects (40 to 87 years) with normal hearing and vision was drawn from the general population in order to compare visual performance for consonant-vowel (CV) syllables and sentences. Results of this investigation revealed that, above 70, age was a factor affecting visual perception of syllables. Individuals above age 70 received the poorest speechreading scores and were inconsistent in viseme categorization. Results of a comparison of speechreading scores for sentences and syllables revealed a greater number of differences among sentences. Only individuals between 40 and 60 years of age received statistically similar mean scores when presented with common sentences. Finally, using a linear regression model, it was found that sentence speechreading performance could be accurately predicted from the CV syllable score within a range of accuracy of +/- 9.7%.

References

YearCitations

1968

335

1977

219

1972

148

1960

115

1969

42

1976

38

1959

38

1974

33

1971

28

1959

24

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