Title:
Perception of unattended speech
Perception of unattended speech
Author(s)
Guillaume, A.
Darwin, C.
Rivenez, M.
Darwin, C.
Rivenez, M.
Advisor(s)
Editor(s)
Brazil, Eoin
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Abstract
This study addresses the question of speech processing under unattended conditions. Dupoux et al. (2003) have recently claimed that unattended words are not lexically processed. We test their conclusion with a different paradigm : participants had to detect a target word belonging to a specific category presented in a rapid list of words, in the attended ear. In the unattended ear, concatenated sentences were presented, some containing a repetition prime presented just before the target words. We found a significant priming effect of 22 ms (Experiment 1), for category detection in the presence of a prime compared with no prime. This priming effect was not affected by whether the right or the left ear received the prime (Experiment 2a and 2b). We also found that the priming effect disappeared when there was no pitch range difference between attended and unattended messages (Experiment 3 and 4). Finally, we replicated the priming effect by compelling participants to focus on the attended message asking them to perform a second task (Experiment 5).
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Date Issued
2004-07
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Text
Resource Subtype
Proceedings