Cognitive control of auditory distraction: Impact of task difficulty, foreknowledge, and working memory capacity supports duplex-mechanism account

Hughes, Robert W., Hurlstone, Mark J., Marsh, John E., Vachon, François and Jones, Dylan M.

(2013)

Hughes, Robert W., Hurlstone, Mark J., Marsh, John E., Vachon, François and Jones, Dylan M. (2013) Cognitive control of auditory distraction: Impact of task difficulty, foreknowledge, and working memory capacity supports duplex-mechanism account. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 39 (2).

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Abstract

The influence of top-down cognitive control on two putatively distinct forms of distraction was investigated. Attentional capture by a task-irrelevant auditory deviation (e.g., a female-spoken token following a sequence of male-spoken tokens)—as indexed by its disruption of a visually-presented recall task—was abolished when focal-task engagement was promoted either by increasing the difficulty of encoding the visual to-be-remembered stimuli (by reducing their perceptual discriminability; Experiments 1 and 2) or by providing foreknowledge of an imminent deviation (Experiment 2). In contrast, distraction from continuously changing auditory stimuli (‘changing-state effect’) was not modulated by task-difficulty or foreknowledge (Experiment 3). We also confirmed that individual differences in working memory capacity—typically associated with maintaining task-engagement in the face of distraction—predict the magnitude of the deviation effect, but not the changing-state effect. This convergence of experimental and psychometric data strongly supports a duplex-mechanism account of auditory distraction: Auditory attentional capture (deviation effect) is open to top-down cognitive control whereas auditory distraction caused by direct conflict between the sound and focal-task processing (changing-state effect) is relatively immune to such control.

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This is a Approved version
This version's date is: 4/2013
This item is not peer reviewed

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https://repository.royalholloway.ac.uk/items/8d0582dc-c2e8-e1d3-9f91-cd3a5e44207f/10/

Item TypeJournal Article
TitleCognitive control of auditory distraction: Impact of task difficulty, foreknowledge, and working memory capacity supports duplex-mechanism account
AuthorsHughes, Robert W.
Hurlstone, Mark J.
Marsh, John E.
Vachon, François
Jones, Dylan M.
Uncontrolled KeywordsCognitive Control; Auditory Distraction; Attentional Capture; Interference-by-Process; Working Memory Capacity
DepartmentsFaculty of Science\Psychology

Identifiers

doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1037/a0029064

Deposited by Research Information System (atira) on 30-Apr-2013 in Royal Holloway Research Online.Last modified on 30-Apr-2013


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