1. Auditory attention switching and judgment switching: Exploring multicomponent task representations
- Author
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Sophie Nolden, Iring Koch, Julia C. Seibold, Josefa Oberem, and Janina Fels
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Linguistics and Language ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Stimulus (physiology) ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Language and Linguistics ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Auditory attention ,Humans ,Hierarchical organization ,Attention ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Male speaker ,Cued speech ,05 social sciences ,Sensory Systems ,Categorization ,Auditory Perception ,Female ,Cues ,Psychology ,Selection criterion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
An auditory attention-switching paradigm was combined with a judgment-switching paradigm to examine the interaction of a varying auditory attention component and a varying judgment component. Participants heard two dichotically presented stimuli-one spoken by a female speaker and one spoken by a male speaker. In each trial, the stimuli were a spoken letter and a spoken number. A visual explicit cue at the beginning of each trial indicated the auditory attention criterion (speaker sex/ear) to identify the target stimulus (Experiment 1) or the judgment that had to be executed (Experiment 2). Hence, the attentional selection criterion switched independently between speaker sexes (or between ears), while the judgment alternated between letter categorization and number categorization. The data indicate that auditory attention criterion and judgment were not processed independently, regardless of whether the attention criterion or the judgment was cued. The partial repetition benefits of the explicitly cued component suggested a hierarchical organization of the auditory attention component and the judgment component within the task set. We suggest that the hierarchy arises due to the explicit cuing of one component rather than due to a "natural" hierarchy of auditory attention component and judgment component.
- Published
- 2018
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