2004
DOI: 10.1037/0278-7393.30.5.1106
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The Irrelevant Sound Phenomenon Revisited: What Role for Working Memory Capacity?

Abstract: High-span individuals (as measured by the operation span [OSPAN] technique) are less likely than lowspan individuals to notice their own names in an unattended auditory stream (A. R. A. Conway, N. Cowan, & M. F. Bunting, 2001). The possibility that OSPAN accounts for individual differences in auditory distraction on an immediate recall test was examined. There was no evidence that high-OSPAN participants were more resistant to the disruption caused by irrelevant speech in serial or in free recall. Low-OSPAN pa… Show more

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Cited by 120 publications
(192 citation statements)
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“…For the most part, we have confirmed the previous (Beaman, 2004;Ellermeier & Zimmer, 1997;Neath et al, 2003) indications that this susceptibility to the ISE is unrelated to memory span. However, we have also demonstrated the existence of various levels of susceptibility to the ISE, consistent across speech and tone effects, for participants at each level of span (see Figure 1).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
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“…For the most part, we have confirmed the previous (Beaman, 2004;Ellermeier & Zimmer, 1997;Neath et al, 2003) indications that this susceptibility to the ISE is unrelated to memory span. However, we have also demonstrated the existence of various levels of susceptibility to the ISE, consistent across speech and tone effects, for participants at each level of span (see Figure 1).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Although this hypothesis was not confirmed in one recent study with adult participants (Beaman, 2004), in Experiment 2 we reexamined this issue with samples of secondgrade children and adults, using both irrelevant speech and irrelevant tones, as in Experiment 1. In this experiment, the list length depended on the individual's span, so that the level of difficulty could be kept comparable across age groups.…”
Section: Regressionsmentioning
confidence: 68%
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“…Both the internal consistency and the temporal stability of OSPAN are higher than those of the reading span test (Klein & Fiss, 1999;Turner & Engle, 1989); hence, it can be considered to give a more reliable WMC index. Thanks to these advantages, OSPAN has become one of the most widely used WMC tasks (Beaman, 2004;Bleckley et al, 2003;Brumback et al, 2005;De Neys, d'Ydewalle, Schaeken, & Vos, 2002;Kane & Engle, 2000;Kane et al, 2004).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%