The precedence effect is an auditory illusion produced by presenting the same signal through 2 loudspeakers, with 1 leading the other by several milliseconds. Adults perceive a sound localized exclusively on the leading side and directionally equivalent to a single source sound. Because the precedence effect is thought to involve cortical functions, newborns were expected not to respond with directional head turning toward these sounds. Newborns were presented with a tape-recorded rattle sound produced in 3 ways: through a single loudspeaker located right or left, through both loudspeakers with 1 onset leading the other by 7 msec, and control stimuli in which both loudspeakers sounded simultaneously, resulting in an apparent center location of the sound. Newborns turned toward the single source sound, but neither to precedence effect stimuli nor control stimuli. These results were related to maturation of the auditory cortex.
The precedence effect is an auditory illusion produced by presenting the same signal through 2 loudspeakers, with 1 leading the other by several milliseconds. Adults perceive a sound localized exclusively on the leading side and directionally equivalent to a single source sound. Because the precedence effect is thought to involve cortical functions, newborns were expected not to respond with directional head turning toward these sounds. Newborns were presented with a tape-recorded rattle sound produced in 3 ways: through a single loudspeaker located right or left, through both loudspeakers with 1 onset leading the other by 7 msec, and control stimuli in which both loudspeakers sounded simultaneously, resulting in an apparent center location of the sound. Newborns turned toward the single source sound, but neither to precedence effect stimuli nor control stimuli. These results were related to maturation of the auditory cortex.
Infants aged 2 and 6 months were tested with the precedence effect, an auditory phenomenon involving sound localization. Each infant was tested with two types of stimuli: sound from a single loudspeaker and precedence-effect sounds produced by the same sound put through two loudspeakers, with one output leading the other by 7 msec. Older infants localized precedence-effect stimuli as they did single-source stimuli, indicating that they perceived this phenomenon as expected. Two-month-olds turned their heads toward single-source sounds, but did not localize precedence-effect sounds, suggesting that that more difficult perceptual task had not been achieved at this age. In general, head-turning toward sound proved far more difficult to elicit in younger infants. A click train was ineffective, but a tape-recorded human voice elicited above-chance low-level turning. The developmental changes in auditory behavior are discussed in terms of the rapid growth of the auditory cortex.
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