1. Can ‘Hebb’ Be Distracted? Testing the Susceptibility of Sequence Learning to Auditory Distraction
- Author
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Michaël Lévesque-Dion, Alexandre Marois, François Vachon, Jean Saint-Aubin, and Maxime Legendre
- Subjects
Activities of daily living ,education ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,lcsh:Consciousness. Cognition ,Auditory distraction ,Sequence learning ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Serial memory ,Irrelevant Sound ,Word learning ,0302 clinical medicine ,Distraction ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Hebb repetition effect ,Sequence (medicine) ,Psykologi (exklusive tillämpad psykologi) ,Recall ,Repetition (rhetorical device) ,05 social sciences ,Sequence learning, Auditory distraction ,lcsh:BF309-499 ,Psychology (excluding Applied Psychology) ,Hebbian theory ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Research Article ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Sequence learning plays a key role in many daily activities such as language and skills acquisition. The present study sought to assess the nature of the Hebb repetition effect - the enhanced serial recall for a repeated sequence of items compared to random sequences - by examining the vulnerability of this classical sequence-learning phenomenon to auditory distraction. Sound can cause unwanted distraction by either interfering specifically with the processes involved in the focal task (interference-by-process), or by diverting attention away from a focal task (attentional capture). Participants were asked to perform visual serial recall, in which one to-be-remembered sequence was repeated every four trials, while ignoring irrelevant sound. Whereas both changing-state (Experiment 1) and deviant sounds (Experiment 2) disrupted recall performance compared to steady-state sounds, performance for the repeated sequence increased across repetitions at the same rate regardless of the sound condition. Such findings suggest that Hebbian sequence learning is impervious to environmental interference, which provides further evidence that the Hebb repetition effect is an analogue of word-form learning. This work was supported by discovery grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Counci lof Canada (NSERC) awarded to François Vachon and to Jean Saint-Aubin. This collaborative work also received support from the Québec/New Brunswick University Cooperation in Advanced Education and Research Program of the Secrétariat aux affaires intergouvernementales canadiennes. The data are available at https://doi.org/10.3886/E101179V1.
- Published
- 2018