Circadian Differences in the Dichotic Processing of Voicing

Male and female adult subjects (N = 112) were tested at two times (morning and afternoon) for time-of-day related shifts in linguistic processing on dichotic listening tasks using (1) a divided-attention paradigm for processing digits (0-9) and (2) a focused-attention paradigm for processing consona...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of neuroscience 1993, Vol.68 (1-2), p.43-52
Hauptverfasser: Morton, L L, Diubaldo, D
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Male and female adult subjects (N = 112) were tested at two times (morning and afternoon) for time-of-day related shifts in linguistic processing on dichotic listening tasks using (1) a divided-attention paradigm for processing digits (0-9) and (2) a focused-attention paradigm for processing consonant-vowel (CV) combinations which were grouped according to the voiced and unvoiced stop consonants. Time-of-day effects were not evident on digits using the divided-attention paradigm. However, on CVs a predicted two-way interaction for Time-of-Day Voicing-due to superior detection of voiced stimuli in the afternoon-was evident. This effect is consistent with a circadian-linked increase in right hemisphere involvement later in the day. Implications for theory, research and educational applications are discussed
ISSN:0020-7454
1563-5279
1543-5245
DOI:10.3109/00207459308994258