“…Therefore, it is possible that an inferior ability to utilize multisensory information for facilitation at a lower stimulus processing level may have impacted on children's ability to exploit this for the benefit of cognitive operations, such as the learning of novel multisensory associations. Immature attention capacities in children may have also contributed to this result (e.g., Abundis‐Gutierrez, Checa, Castellanos, & Rosario Rueda, ; Cromer, Schembri, Harel, & Maruff, ; Morrison, ; Pozuelos, Paz‐Alonso, Castillo, Fuentes, & Rueda, ), as multisensory processes have been shown to be dependent on an individual's state of attention (e.g., Dean et al., ; Hillyard, Stormer, Feng, Martinez, & McDonald, ; Talsma, ; Talsma, Senkowski, Soto‐Faraco, & Woldorff, ). Indeed, it is likely that the current task engaged significant attentional resources given the speeded nature of the task and the fact that an incidental trial‐and‐error learning paradigm was employed.…”