Familiarity, Expertise, and Change Detection: Change Deafness is Worse in Your Native Language
We first replicated the language-familiarity effect for voice discrimination and found better voice discrimination in familiar languages. However, when listeners were not cued to listen for changes, both English and Spanish speakers exhibited greater change deafness in their familiar language. Resul...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Perception (London) 2014-01, Vol.43 (2-3), p.219-222 |
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creator | Neuhoff, John G Schott, Steven A Kropf, Adam J Neuhoff, Emily M |
description | We first replicated the language-familiarity effect for voice discrimination and found better voice discrimination in familiar languages. However, when listeners were not cued to listen for changes, both English and Spanish speakers exhibited greater change deafness in their familiar language. Results suggest that lexical/semantic attention in a familiar language and increased indexical processing in an unfamiliar language can produce greater change deafness in familiar languages. |
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subjects | Attention - physiology Audition Biological and medical sciences Discrimination (Psychology) - physiology Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology Humans Language Perception Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry Psychology. Psychophysiology Reaction Time - physiology Recognition (Psychology) - physiology Semantics Speech Perception - physiology |
title | Familiarity, Expertise, and Change Detection: Change Deafness is Worse in Your Native Language |
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