Difference between revisions of "McGurk effect"
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Haspelmath (talk | contribs) (New page: In phonetics, the '''McGurk effect''' was discovered by the psychologists McGurk and MacDonald by accident when they dubbed an audio syllable "ba" onto a visual "ga". When the ...) |
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− | + | The '''McGurk effect''' was discovered by the psychologists [[McGurk]] and [[MacDonald]] in 1976 by accident when they dubbed an audio syllable "ba" onto a visual "ga". When the tape was played, "da" was perceived. They realised that "da" resulted from an audio-visual illusion that has become known as the McGurk effect or McGurk illusion. It is the effect experienced when a subject's perception of a speech sound is influenced by the sight of a different sound being produced. | |
===See also=== | ===See also=== | ||
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[[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] | [[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] | ||
+ | [[Category:Psycholinguistics]] |
Latest revision as of 12:16, 13 July 2014
The McGurk effect was discovered by the psychologists McGurk and MacDonald in 1976 by accident when they dubbed an audio syllable "ba" onto a visual "ga". When the tape was played, "da" was perceived. They realised that "da" resulted from an audio-visual illusion that has become known as the McGurk effect or McGurk illusion. It is the effect experienced when a subject's perception of a speech sound is influenced by the sight of a different sound being produced.