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                                       Details for article 52 of 105 found articles
 
 
  Irrelevant sound effects amongst younger and older adults: Objective findings and subjective insights
 
 
Title: Irrelevant sound effects amongst younger and older adults: Objective findings and subjective insights
Author: Beaman, Philip C.
Appeared in: European journal of cognitive psychology
Paging: Volume 17 (2005) nr. 2 pages 241-265
Year: 2005-02-01
Contents: Two experiments examine the effects of extraneous speech and nonspeech noise on a visual short-term memory task administered to younger and older adults. Experiment 1 confirms an earlier report that playing task-irrelevant speech is no more distracting for older adults than for younger adults (Rouleau & Belleville, 1996), indicating that “irrelevant sound effects” in short-term memory operate in a different manner to recalling targets in the presence of competing speech (Tun, O'Kane, & Wingfield, 2002). Experiment 2 extends this result to nonspeech noise and demonstrates that the result cannot be ascribed to hearing difficulties amongst the older age group, although the data also show that older adults rated the noise as less annoying and uncomfortable than younger adults. Implications for theories of the irrelevant sound effect, and for cognitive ageing, are discussed.
Publisher: Psychology Press
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 52 of 105 found articles
 
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