Age differences in the Irrelevant Sound Effect: A Serial Recognition Paradigm

In adults, the disrupting effect of irrelevant background sounds with distinct temporal-spectral variations (changing-state sounds) on short-term memory performance was found to be robust. In the present study, a verbal serial recognition task was used to investigate this so-called Irrelevant Sound...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psihologija 2015, Vol.48 (1), p.35-43
Hauptverfasser: Schwarz, Helene, Schlittmeier, Sabine, Otto, Annette, Persike, Malte, Klatte, Maria, Imhof, Margarete, Meinhardt-Injac, Bozana
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container_end_page 43
container_issue 1
container_start_page 35
container_title Psihologija
container_volume 48
creator Schwarz, Helene
Schlittmeier, Sabine
Otto, Annette
Persike, Malte
Klatte, Maria
Imhof, Margarete
Meinhardt-Injac, Bozana
description In adults, the disrupting effect of irrelevant background sounds with distinct temporal-spectral variations (changing-state sounds) on short-term memory performance was found to be robust. In the present study, a verbal serial recognition task was used to investigate this so-called Irrelevant Sound Effect (ISE) in adults and 8– to 10-year-old children. An essential part of the short-term memory impairment during changing-state speech is due to interference processes (changing-state effect) which can be differentiated from the deviation effect of auditory distraction. In line with recent findings (Hughes et al., 2013), our study demonstrates that the changing-state effect is not modulated by task difficulty. Moreover, our results show that the changing-state effect remains stable for children and adults. This suggests that the differences in the magnitude of the ISE as reported by Elliott (2002) and Klatte et al. (2010) are most likely related to the increase in attentional control during childhood.
doi_str_mv 10.2298/PSI1501035S
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subjects Cognitive Psychology
development
Developmental Psychology
Experimental Pschology
Gerontology
serial recognition task
task difficulty
the changing-state effect
the irrelevant sound effect
title Age differences in the Irrelevant Sound Effect: A Serial Recognition Paradigm
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