Speech is more difficult to understand when it is presented concurrently with a distractor speech stream. One source of this difficulty is that competing speech can act as an attentional lure, requiring listeners to exert attentional control to ensure that attention does not drift away from the target. Stronger attentional control may enable listeners to more successfully ignore distracting speech, and so individual differences in selective attention may be one factor driving the ability to perceive speech in complex environments. However, the lack of a paradigm for measuring non-verbal sustained selective attention to sound has made this hypothesis difficult to test. Here we find that individuals who are better able to attend to a stream o...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Listeners with normal hearing show considerable individual differences in speech understanding when ...
Background: Attending to goal-relevant information can leave us metaphorically “blind” or “deaf” to ...
Does listeners\u27 musical experience improve their ability to perceive speech-in-speech? In the pre...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Earlier studies have shown that musically trained individuals may have a benefit in adverse listenin...
Even in the quietest of rooms, our senses are perpetually inundated by a barrage of sounds, requirin...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
There is much interest in the idea that musicians perform better than non-musicians in understanding...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Listeners with normal hearing show considerable individual differences in speech understanding when ...
Background: Attending to goal-relevant information can leave us metaphorically “blind” or “deaf” to ...
Does listeners\u27 musical experience improve their ability to perceive speech-in-speech? In the pre...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Several studies have shown that musicians may have an advantage in a variety of auditory tasks, incl...
Earlier studies have shown that musically trained individuals may have a benefit in adverse listenin...
Even in the quietest of rooms, our senses are perpetually inundated by a barrage of sounds, requirin...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
There is much interest in the idea that musicians perform better than non-musicians in understanding...
Evidence for transfer of musical training to better perception of speech in noise has been mixed. Un...
Listeners with normal hearing show considerable individual differences in speech understanding when ...
Background: Attending to goal-relevant information can leave us metaphorically “blind” or “deaf” to ...