Abstract
Four experiments examined the nature of multisensory speech information. In Experiment 1, participants were asked to match heard voices with dynamic visual-alone video clips of speakers' articulating faces. This cross-modal matching task was used to examine whether vocal source matching can be accomplished across sensory modalities. The results showed that observers could match speaking faces and voices, indicating that information about the speaker was available for cross-modal comparisons. In a series of follow-up experiments, several stimulus manipulations were used to determine some of the critical acoustic and optic patterns necessary for specifying cross-modal source information. The results showed that cross-modal source information was not available in static visual displays of faces and was not contingent on a prominent acoustic cue to vocal identity (f0). Furthermore, cross-modal matching was not possible when the acoustic signal was temporally reversed.