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Journal Article

Citation

Baddeley A, Salamé P. J. Exp. Psychol. Learn. Mem. Cogn. 1986; 12(4): 525-529.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2945899

Abstract

Broadbent (1983) has suggested that the influence of unattended speech on immediate serial recall is a perceptual phenomenon rather than a memory phenomenon. In order to test this, subjects were required to classify visually presented pairs of consonants on the basis of either case or rhyme. They were tested both in silence and against a background of continuous spoken Arabic presented at 75 dB(A). No effect of unattended speech was observed on either the speed or accuracy of processing. A further study required subjects to decide whether visually presented nonwords were homophonous with real words. Again, performance was not impaired by unattended speech, although a clear effect was observed on an immediate serial memory task. Our results give no support to the perceptual interpretation of the unattended speech effect.


Language: en

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