“…If it is reoriented in space (e.g., to the location of the auditory signal of the secondary task), the shift disrupts the maintenance process. Among others, Merat and Groeger (2003;Merat, Groeger, & Withington, 1999), who also reported interference between auditory spatial perception and visual spatial working memory, did not restrict interference to spatial attention, but assumed the common demand on general attentional resources to be causative (see also Klauer & Stegmaier, 1997). This approach, however, leaves open the question of how auditory spatial information is maintained.…”