“…When speech is seen, the functions of face recognition and lipreading are also considered to be distinct in information, operations, and neurophysiology (Bruce & Young, 1986;Campbell, Landis, & Regard, 1986;Ellis, 1989;Fodor, 1983;Liberman & Mattingly, 1985). However, recent research on both modalities has challenged these assumed independencies(for reviews, see Nygaard, Sommers, & Pisoni, 1994;Remez, Fellowes, & Rubin, 1997;Rosenblum, Yakel, & Green, 2000;Schweinberger & Soukup, 1998;Yakel, Rosenblum, & Fortier, 2000). Regarding auditory speech, there is evidence that voice information can facilitate linguistic recovery in the contexts of word naming and identification in noise (Mullennix, Pisoni, & Martin, 1989;Nygaard et al, 1994), recognition memory (Craik & Kirsner, 1974;Palmeri, Goldinger, & Pisoni, 1993), implicit memory (Church & Schacter, 1994), and form-based priming (Saldaña & Rosenblum, 1994).…”