Background: In everyday life we must frequently ignore distractions arising from multiple senses. However, most of our understanding about this cognitive process (known as interference control) is derived from unimodal paradigms, in which relevant and irrelevant information are presented in the same sense. Thus, it remains unclear whether the mechanisms proposed to underpin unimodal interference control generalise to cross-modal contexts. Aims: The aim of this thesis was to identify whether similar mechanisms underlie unimodal and cross-modal interference control. To answer this question, I compared patterns of unimodal and cross-modal interference in development and ageing, and compared the processing levels at which unimodal and cross-...