Literature DB >> 20178965

The involuntary capture of attention by sound: novelty and postnovelty distraction in young and older adults.

Fabrice B R Parmentier1, Pilar Andrés.   

Abstract

The presentation of auditory oddball stimuli (novels) among otherwise repeated sounds (standards) triggers a well-identified chain of electrophysiological responses: The detection of acoustic change (mismatch negativity), the involuntary orientation of attention to (P3a) and its reorientation from the novel. Behaviorally, novels reduce performance in an unrelated visual task (novelty distraction). Past studies of the cross-modal capture of attention by acoustic novelty have typically discarded from their analysis the data from the standard trials immediately following a novel, despite some evidence in mono-modal oddball tasks of distraction extending beyond the presentation of deviants/novels (postnovelty distraction). The present study measured novelty and postnovelty distraction and examined the hypothesis that both types of distraction may be underpinned by common frontally-related processes by comparing young and older adults. Our data establish that novels delayed responses not only on the current trial and but also on the subsequent standard trial. Both of these effects increased with age. We argue that both types of distraction relate to the reconfiguration of task-sets and discuss this contention in relation to recent electrophysiological studies.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20178965     DOI: 10.1027/1618-3169/a000009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Psychol        ISSN: 1618-3169


  25 in total

Review 1.  The cognitive determinants of behavioral distraction by deviant auditory stimuli: a review.

Authors:  Fabrice B R Parmentier
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2013-12-21

2.  Human sensitivity to differences in the rate of auditory cue change.

Authors:  Erin S Maloff; D Wesley Grantham; Daniel H Ashmead
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  2013-05       Impact factor: 1.840

3.  Do you really represent my task? Sequential adaptation effects to unexpected events support referential coding for the joint Simon effect.

Authors:  Bibiana Klempova; Roman Liepelt
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2015-04-02

4.  Aging increases distraction by auditory oddballs in visual, but not auditory tasks.

Authors:  Alicia Leiva; Fabrice B R Parmentier; Pilar Andrés
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2014-05-23

5.  Auditory stimulus has a larger effect on anticipatory postural adjustments in older than young adults during choice step reaction.

Authors:  Tatsunori Watanabe; Kotaro Saito; Kazuto Ishida; Shigeo Tanabe; Ippei Nojima
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2017-10-12       Impact factor: 3.078

6.  Comparable mechanisms of working memory interference by auditory and visual motion in youth and aging.

Authors:  Jyoti Mishra; Theodore Zanto; Aneesha Nilakantan; Adam Gazzaley
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2013-06-19       Impact factor: 3.139

7.  Effects of emotionally charged auditory stimulation on gait performance in the elderly: a preliminary study.

Authors:  John-Ross Rizzo; Preeti Raghavan; J R McCrery; Mooyeon Oh-Park; Joe Verghese
Journal:  Arch Phys Med Rehabil       Date:  2014-12-24       Impact factor: 3.966

8.  Surprise leads to noisier perceptual decisions.

Authors:  Marta I Garrido; Raymond J Dolan; Maneesh Sahani
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2011-05-15

9.  Effects of age on electrophysiological correlates of speech processing in a dynamic "cocktail-party" situation.

Authors:  Stephan Getzmann; Christina Hanenberg; Jörg Lewald; Michael Falkenstein; Edmund Wascher
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2015-09-29       Impact factor: 4.677

Review 10.  Hearing loss and brain plasticity: the hyperactivity phenomenon.

Authors:  Björn Herrmann; Blake E Butler
Journal:  Brain Struct Funct       Date:  2021-06-07       Impact factor: 3.270

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