Interference by process, not content, determines semantic auditory distraction

Marsh, J.E., Hughes, Rob and Jones, D.M.

(2009)

Marsh, J.E., Hughes, Rob and Jones, D.M. (2009) Interference by process, not content, determines semantic auditory distraction. Cognition, 110 (1).

Our Full Text Deposits

Full text access: Open

Full text file - 267.75 KB

Links to Copies of this Item Held Elsewhere


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. © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Information about this Version

This is a Submitted version
This version's date is: 1/1/2009
This item is not peer reviewed

Link to this Version

https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/d9e01396-7133-bc50-1dc0-ae72d38c447b/1/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleInterference by process, not content, determines semantic auditory distraction
AuthorsMarsh, J.E.
Hughes, Rob
Jones, D.M.
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2008.08.003

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 24-May-2012 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 24-May-2012

Notes

MEDLINE® is the source for the MeSH terms of this document.


Details