November 26th SSF - Bryony Payne
Please join us at the SSF on November 26th to hear a talk on Bryony Payne's doctoral work, titled "Prioritisation of self-associated voices".
Talk Title: Prioritisation of self-associated voices
Abstract:
Information associated with the self is prioritised relative to information associated with others. It has been shown, for example, that stimuli assigned to the self in experiments are processed more quickly and accurately, and are better encoded in memory. In this talk, I demonstrate that is possible to give people a new voice which, as it becomes incorporated in the self, accrues a processing advantage as a self-associated stimulus. I will describe a series of experiments in which I have established that listeners show perceptual prioritisation of a new voice, as well as an increased sense of agency over that voice. Finally, I will present new data from a study that uses text-to-speech technology to investigate how these effects hold up when self- and other-associated voices are learned via a real-life social interaction.
Bryony Payne
Doctoral Student
Department of Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Sciences, UCL
Further information
Ticketing
Open
Cost
Free
Open to
All
Availability
Yes
Organiser
Dr. Antony Scott Trotter
Speech, Hearing and Phonetic Science