Title of article :
Interference by process, not content, determines semantic auditory distraction
Author/Authors :
Marsh، نويسنده , , John E. and Hughes، نويسنده , , Robert W. and Jones، نويسنده , , Dylan M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
16
From page :
23
To page :
38
Abstract :
Distraction by irrelevant background sound of visually-based cognitive tasks illustrates the vulnerability of attentional selectivity across modalities. Four experiments centred on auditory distraction during tests of memory for visually-presented semantic information. Meaningful irrelevant speech disrupted the free recall of semantic category-exemplars more than meaningless irrelevant sound (Experiment 1). This effect was exacerbated when the irrelevant speech was semantically related to the to-be-remembered material (Experiment 2). Importantly, however, these effects of meaningfulness and semantic relatedness were shown to arise only when instructions emphasized recall by category rather than by serial order (Experiments 3 and 4). The results favor a process-oriented, rather than a structural, approach to the breakdown of attentional selectivity and forgetting: performance is impaired by the similarity of process brought to bear on the relevant and irrelevant material, not the similarity in item content.
Keywords :
Auditory distraction , Semantic interference , Semantic-category clustering , Interference-by-process , selective attention
Journal title :
Cognition
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Cognition
Record number :
2076425
Link To Document :
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