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Original Article

Guessing and speechreading

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Pages 13-20
Received 09 Dec 1985
Published online: 12 Oct 2009
 

The present experiment investigated the relation between guessing (cf. synthetic ability, Jeffers and Barley, 1971) and speechreading performance. Guessing was measured by two types of completion tests: One sentence-completion test (SCT), and one word-completion test (WCT). The results indicated that skilled guessing—in terms of SCT-performance — proved to be critical for longer sentences to be speechread, while skilled guessing — as measured by a WCT — proved to be critical for speechreading situations where a low level of contextual information was offered. The latter result was also obtained for one of the SCT-subtests. The results suggest that speechreading and guessing skill are related to each other, and that different types of guessing tests predict different aspects of the speechreading process.

 

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