Browsing by Author "Baart, Martijn"
Now showing items 1-15 of 15
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Cross-modal noise compensation in audiovisual words
Baart, Martijn; Armstrong, Blair C.; Martin, Clara D.; Frost, Ram; Carreiras, Manuel (Scientific Reports, 2017)Perceiving linguistic input is vital for human functioning, but the process is complicated by the fact that the incoming signal is often degraded. However, humans can compensate for unimodal noise by relying on simultaneous ... -
Electrophysiological evidence for differences between fusion and combination illusions in audiovisual speech perception
Baart, Martijn; Lindborg, Alma; Andersen, Tobias S. (European Journal of Neuroscience, 2017)Incongruent audiovisual speech stimuli can lead to perceptual illusions such as fusions or combinations. Here, we investigated the underlying audiovisual integration process by measuring ERPs. We observed that visual ... -
Fluidity in the perception of auditory speech: Cross-modal recalibration of voice gender and vowel identity by a talking face
Burgering, Merel A; van Laarhoven, Thijs; Baart, Martijn; Vroomen, Jean (Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 2020)Humans quickly adapt to variations in the speech signal. Adaptation may surface as recalibration, a learning effect driven by error-minimisation between a visual face and an ambiguous auditory speech signal, or as selective ... -
Implementing EEG hyperscanning setups
Barraza, Paulo; Dumas, Guillaume; Liu, Huanhuan; Blanco-Gomez, Gabriel; van den Heuvel, Marion I.; Baart, Martijn; Pérez, Alejandro (MethodsX, 2019)Hyperscanning refers to obtaining simultaneous neural recordings from more than one person (Montage et al., 2002 [1]), that can be used to study interactive situations. In particular, hyperscanning with Electroencephalography ... -
Lexical access versus lexical decision processes for auditory, visual, and audiovisual items: Insights from behavioral and neural measures
López Zunini, Rocío A.; Baart, Martijn; Samuel, Arthur G.; Armstrong, Blair C. (Neuropsychologia, 2020)In two experiments, we investigated the relationship between lexical access processes, and processes that are specifically related to making lexical decisions. In Experiment 1, participants performed a standard lexical ... -
Lexico-semantic access and audiovisual integration in the aging brain: Insights from mixed-effects regression analyses of event-related potentials
López Zunini, Rocío A.; Baart, Martijn; Samuel, Arthur G.; Armstrong, Blair C. (ELSEVIER, 2022)We investigated how aging modulates lexico-semantic processes in the visual (seeing written items), auditory (hearing spoken items) and audiovisual (seeing written items while hearing congruent spoken items) modalities. ... -
Lip-Reading Enables the Brain to Synthesize Auditory Features of Unknown Silent Speech
Bourguignon, Mathieu; Baart, Martijn; Kapnoula, Efthymia C.; Molinaro, Nicola (The Journal of Neuroscience, 2020)Lip-reading is crucial for understanding speech in challenging conditions. But how the brain extracts meaning from, silent, visual speech is still under debate. Lip-reading in silence activates the auditory cortices, but ... -
Neurodevelopmental oscillatory basis of speech processing in noise
Bertels, Julie; Niesen, Maxime; Destoky, Florian; Coolen, Tim; Vander Ghinst, Marc; Wens, Vincent; Rovai, Antonin; Trotta, Nicola; Baart, Martijn; Molinaro, Nicola; De Tiège, Xavier; Bourguignon, Mathieu (ELSEVIER, 2023)Humans’ extraordinary ability to understand speech in noise relies on multiple processes that develop with age. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we characterize the underlying neuromaturational basis by quantifying how ... -
No “Self” Advantage for Audiovisual Speech Aftereffects
Modelska, Maria; Pourquié, Marie; Baart, Martijn (Frontiers in Psychology, 2019)Although the default state of the world is that we see and hear other people talking, there is evidence that seeing and hearing ourselves rather than someone else may lead to visual (i.e., lip-read) or auditory “self” ... -
Quantifying lip-read-induced suppression and facilitation of the auditory N1 and P2 reveals peak enhancements and delays
Baart, Martijn (Psychophysiology, 2016)Lip-read speech suppresses and speeds up the auditory N1 and P2 peaks, but these effects are not always observed or reported. Here, the robustness of lip-read-induced N1/P2 suppression and facilitation in phonetically ... -
Recalibration of vocal affect by a dynamic face
Baart, Martijn; Vroomen, Jean (Experimental Brain Research, 2018)Perception of vocal affect is influenced by the concurrent sight of an emotional face. We demonstrate that the sight of an emotional face also can induce recalibration of vocal affect. Participants were exposed to videos ... -
Second-language word recognition in noise: Interdependent neuromodulatory effects of semantic context and crosslinguistic interactions driven by word form similarity
Guediche, Sara; de Bruin, Angela; Caballero-Gaudes, Cesar; Baart, Martijn; Samuel, Arthur G. (NeuroImage, 2021)Spoken language comprehension is a fundamental component of our cognitive skills. We are quite proficient at deciphering words from the auditory input despite the fact that the speech we hear is often masked by noise such ... -
Semantic priming effects can be modulated by crosslinguistic interactions during second-language auditory word recognition
Guediche, Sara; Baart, Martijn; Samuel, Arthur G. (Bilingualism: Language and Cognition, 2020)The current study investigates how second language auditory word recognition, in early and highly proficient Spanish–Basque (L1-L2) bilinguals, is influenced by crosslinguistic phonological-lexical interactions and semantic ... -
Speech-specific audiovisual integration modulates induced theta-band oscillations
Lindborg, Alma; Baart, Martijn; Stekelenburg, Jeroen J.; Vroomen, Jean; Andersen, Tobias S. (PLoS ONE, 2019)... -
The late positive potential (LPP): A neural marker of internalizing problems in early childhood
McLean, Mia A.; Van den Bergh, Bea R.H.; Baart, Martijn; Vroomen, Jean; van den Heuvel, Marion I. (International Journal of Psychophysiology, 2020)Background: One potentially relevant neurophysiological marker of internalizing problems (anxiety/depressive symptoms) is the late positive potential (LPP), as it is related to processing of emotional stimuli. For the ...