Moray Flashcards

attention in dichotic listening: affective cues and the influence of instructions

1
Q

Aim

A

to test Cherry’s dichotic listening findings in relation to:
- amount of info recognised in unattended msg
- effect of hearing your name in unattended msg
- effect of instructions to identify a specific target in unattended msg

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2
Q

Research method

A

Lab experiment
+ : highly controlled environment, eliminates extraneous variables, ez to replicate so reliable
- : artificial, low ecological validiity, difficult to set up lab procedures where ppl would behave as they would irl, demand characteristics

1) Repeated measures
2) Independent measures
3) Independent measures

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3
Q

Participants

A
  • m & f undergraduates + research workers
  • exp 1: not given ppts
  • exp 2: 12 ppts
  • exp 3: 2 groups of 14
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4
Q

Controls

A
  • same recorder speed 130 wpm
  • same volume on either side, same tape recorder
  • ppts given 4 passages to prose shadow for practice
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5
Q

Procedure 1

A

1) Simple words short list repeated in 1 ear while ppts shadowed (repeated) a msg in other ear
2) list repeated 35 times, faded in after shadowing began + out as msg ended
3) ppts asked to report all content they could from rejected msg
4) Given recognition test, included: words from shadowed, unattended & words in neither
5) Gap between shadowing end + recognition = 30s

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6
Q

P1 Variables

A
  • IV: Shadowed, unattended msg
  • DV: words recognised correctly in rejected msg
  • CV: Recognition test
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7
Q

Procedure 2

A

1) Ppts shadowed 10 short passages, asked to make few mistakes as possible
2) Instructions inserted in non-attended ear at start, within passage or both eg. listen to right ear
3) 6 instructions given within passage eg. change to other ear. 1/2 prefixed by name (affective instruction)
4) 4 passages; ✕ instructions given within msg

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8
Q

P2 Variables

A
  • AIM: find limits of attentional blocks efficiency
  • IV: whether instructions were prefixed by ppts name (affective) or not (non-affective)
  • DV: no. affective instructions perceived
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9
Q

Procedure 3

A

1) 2 groups of 14 ppts shadowed 2 of 2 simultaneous dichotomy msg
2) In some msgs, digits inserted towards end of msg. Sometimes in both msgs & sometimes in 1. Positions of numbers in msg and controls w no numbers were randomly inserted.
3) 1 group told they’d be asked Qs ab shadowed msg content at the end of each msg & others instructed to memorise all numbers

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10
Q

P3 Variables

A
  • AIM: to show instructions may alter chances of material in rejected msg being perceived
  • IV: where ppts were told b4 that they had to answer Qs ab shadowed msg at end of passage or memorise numbers
  • DV: no. Digits correctly reported
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11
Q

Results 1

A

words presented —> mean no. Words recognised /7
- shadowed —> 4.9
- rejected —> 1.9
- for 1st time in recognition test —> 2.6

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12
Q

Results 2

A
  • presence name can cause instruction to be heard ; affective content in unattended msg can break thru attentional barrier
    instructions followed
    > 20/39 w name
    > 4/36 name
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13
Q

Results 3

A
  • diff between mean no. Digits reported under 2 conditions (told they’d be asked ab content or to listen to digits) was statistically significant
  • ; even when alerted to possibility of hearing digits, perception affected
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14
Q

Conclusions

A
  • if ppts direct attention to 1 ear + reject other, almost none of verbal content of rejected is able to penetrate attentional barrier
  • short list of simple words presented as rejected msg shows no trace of being recalled even when presented many times
  • subjectively important msgs eg. Name can penetrate barrier ~ person will hear instructions containing own name in rejected
  • v difficult to make ‘neutral’ material important enough to break thru barrier set up in dichotic shadowing
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15
Q

Type of data

A

Quantitative
1) no. Words recognised correctly
2) no. Affective instructions perceived
3) no. Digits correctly reported

can draw table
easy to analyse/compare
lacking human insight, why?

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16
Q

Validity

A
  • high internal ; controls (eg. same vol) ensured only IV successfully impacted DV ~ tested what it was set out to test
  • low external ; not realistic but fiction paras could increase realism
17
Q

Reliability

A
  • high, replicable
  • extraneous variables limited by controls (eg. sound speed 130wpm - words per min) ~ standardized procedure
18
Q

Sampling bias
Ethics

A
  • generalise ; not everyone undergraduates/researchers, used to being tested + need certain intelligence lvls
    m + f but small sample ~ represent all society

no ethical issues

19
Q

Ethnocentrism

A
  • ethnocentric ; all from same area (single Western uni)
  • differences found between languages ; monolingual speakers had right ear advantage over bilingual
  • bilingual ppl struggle w noisy environments
  • BUT Swedish/Finnish perform better
20
Q

Practical Applications

A
  • helps w teaching methods in skl
  • improving attention
  • testing pre-verbal children’s hearing ~ understanding hearing impairments
  • testing coma patients