Age Effects in Dichotic Listening to Consonant-vowel Syllables: Interactions with Attention
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
A relatively large sample of individuals (N = 240) ranging from 7 to 70 years were studied with the dichotic listening (DL) technique as a measure of language lateralization. Two questions were asked: (a) Is there a developmental effect for the right-ear advantage (REA) with age? (b) Is there a developmental effect for attentional modulation of the REA? The participants were all right-handed, healthy individuals tested in Sweden and Norway. The stimuli were dichotic presentations of consonant-vowel (CV) syllable pairs. There were 3 different attentional conditions: nonforced (NF) attention, with no specific instructions about focusing of attention; forced-right (FR) attention, with instructions to focus attention on the right-ear stimulus; and forced-left (FL) attention, with instructions to focus attention on the left-ear stimulus. The results showed a REA in all age groups, except for the 9-year-olds, in the NF condition. In the FR condition, all age groups showed a REA. The youngest age groups did not, however, increase the REA to the same degree as the older age groups, as indicated by the significant age x ear interaction. In the FL condition, all age groups, with the exception of the youngest groups, showed a left-ear advantage (LEA). It is concluded that the REA effect in DL is subject to developmental effects and that attentional effects on laterality also develop with increasing age.
Littlejohn J, Blackburn D, Venneri A Front Dement. 2024; 2:1207546.
PMID: 39081992 PMC: 11285700. DOI: 10.3389/frdem.2023.1207546.
Akcay B, Inanc G Ir J Med Sci. 2023; 193(3):1479-1486.
PMID: 38123885 DOI: 10.1007/s11845-023-03593-2.
Goupell M, Eisenberg D, DeRoy Milvae K Atten Percept Psychophys. 2021; 83(5):2083-2101.
PMID: 33782914 PMC: 8480144. DOI: 10.3758/s13414-021-02244-x.
A Developmental Eye Tracking Investigation of Cued Task Switching Performance.
Zheng A, Church J Child Dev. 2021; 92(4):1652-1672.
PMID: 33417266 PMC: 8451801. DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13478.
Moore D, Hugdahl K, Stewart H, Vannest J, Perdew A, Sloat N Front Psychol. 2020; 11:675.
PMID: 32373024 PMC: 7177005. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00675.