Modulation of Auditory Attention by Training

Author:

Soveri Anna1,Tallus Jussi2,Laine Matti1,Nyberg Lars345,Bäckman Lars6,Hugdahl Kenneth789,Tuomainen Jyrki110,Westerhausen René78,Hämäläinen Heikki2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Logopedics, Abo Akademi University, Turku, Finland

2. Department of Psychology, Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Turku, Finland

3. Department of Radiation Sciences, Umeå University, Sweden

4. Department of Integrative Medical Biology, Umeå University, Sweden

5. Umeå Centre for Functional Brain Imaging, Sweden

6. Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institutet, Sweden

7. Department of Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway

8. Division of Psychiatry, Haukeland University Hospital, Norway

9. Department of Radiology, Haukeland University Hospital, Norway

10. Speech, Hearing and Phonetics Sciences, University College London, UK

Abstract

We studied the effects of training on auditory attention in healthy adults with a speech perception task involving dichotically presented syllables. Training involved bottom-up manipulation (facilitating responses from the harder-to-report left ear through a decrease of right-ear stimulus intensity), top-down manipulation (focusing attention on the left-ear stimuli through instruction), or their combination. The results showed significant training-related effects for top-down training. These effects were evident as higher overall accuracy rates in the forced-left dichotic listening (DL) condition that sets demands on attentional control, as well as a response shift toward left-sided reports in the standard DL task. Moreover, a transfer effect was observed in an untrained auditory-spatial attention task involving bilateral stimulation where top-down training led to a relatively stronger focus on left-sided stimuli. Our results indicate that training of attentional control can modulate the allocation of attention in the auditory space in adults. Malleability of auditory attention in healthy adults raises the issue of potential training gains in individuals with attentional deficits.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,General Medicine

Reference35 articles.

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