Article 2018

Auditory Task Irrelevance: A Basis for Inattentional Deafness

{Objective This study investigates the neural basis of inattentional deafness, which could result from task irrelevance in the auditory modality. Background Humans can fail to respond to auditory alarms under high workload situations. This failure, termed inattentional deafness, is often attributed to high workload in the visual modality, which reduces one\textquoterights capacity for information processing. Besides this, our capacity for processing auditory information could also be selectively diminished if there is no obvious task relevance in the auditory channel. This could be another contributing factor given the rarity of auditory warnings. Method Forty-eight participants performed a visuomotor tracking task while auditory stimuli were presented: a frequent pure tone, an infrequent pure tone, and infrequent environmental sounds. Participants were required either to respond to the presentation of the infrequent pure tone (auditory task-relevant) or not (auditory task-irrelevant). We recorded and compared the event-related potentials (ERPs) that were generated by environmental sounds, which were always task-irrelevant for both groups. These ERPs served as an index for our participants\textquoteright awareness of the task-irrelevant auditory scene. Results Manipulation of auditory task relevance influenced the brain\textquoterights response to task-irrelevant environmental sounds. Specifically, the late novelty-P3 to irrelevant environmental sounds, which underlies working memory updating, was found to be selectively enhanced by auditory task relevance independent of visuomotor workload. Conclusion Task irrelevance in the auditory modality selectively reduces our brain\textquoterights responses to unexpected and irrelevant sounds regardless of visuomotor workload.}

Author(s): Scheer, M and Bülthoff, HH and Chuang, LL
Journal: {Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society}
Volume: 60
Number (issue): 3
Pages: 428--440
Year: 2018
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1177/0018720818760919
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{ScheerBC2018,
  title = {{Auditory Task Irrelevance: A Basis for Inattentional Deafness}},
  journal = {{Human Factors: The Journal of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society}},
  abstract = {{Objective This study investigates the neural basis of inattentional deafness, which could result from task irrelevance in the auditory modality. Background Humans can fail to respond to auditory alarms under high workload situations. This failure, termed inattentional deafness, is often attributed to high workload in the visual modality, which reduces one\textquoterights capacity for information processing. Besides this, our capacity for processing auditory information could also be selectively diminished if there is no obvious task relevance in the auditory channel. This could be another contributing factor given the rarity of auditory warnings. Method Forty-eight participants performed a visuomotor tracking task while auditory stimuli were presented: a frequent pure tone, an infrequent pure tone, and infrequent environmental sounds. Participants were required either to respond to the presentation of the infrequent pure tone (auditory task-relevant) or not (auditory task-irrelevant). We recorded and compared the event-related potentials (ERPs) that were generated by environmental sounds, which were always task-irrelevant for both groups. These ERPs served as an index for our participants\textquoteright awareness of the task-irrelevant auditory scene. Results Manipulation of auditory task relevance influenced the brain\textquoterights response to task-irrelevant environmental sounds. Specifically, the late novelty-P3 to irrelevant environmental sounds, which underlies working memory updating, was found to be selectively enhanced by auditory task relevance independent of visuomotor workload. Conclusion Task irrelevance in the auditory modality selectively reduces our brain\textquoterights responses to unexpected and irrelevant sounds regardless of visuomotor workload.}},
  volume = {60},
  number = {3},
  pages = {428--440},
  year = {2018},
  slug = {scheerbc2018},
  author = {Scheer, M and B\"ulthoff, HH and Chuang, LL}
}