Babies don't learn to talk just from hearing sounds. New research suggests they're lip-readers too. It happens during that magical stage when a baby's babbling gradually changes from gibberish into ...
New research from the University of Kansas uses network science to determine why people make mistakes when lip-reading. Michael Vitevitch, professor of speech-language-hearing at KU, and his ...
Summary: Lip-reading is a highly demanding cognitive feat that forces the brain to decode speech by translating physical mouth movements instead of acoustic waveforms. While psychologists have long ...
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