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The irrelevant sound effect: Testing the psychological effects of sequence predictability

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posted on 2023-11-07, 00:11 authored by Alessandro Antonietti, Tindara Caprì, Rosa Angela Fabio, George StuartGeorge Stuart, Giulia Towey, Annamaria Pugliese, Gabriella Martino
We tested the hypothesis that expectancy-violation is key to understanding those conditions under which instrumental music disrupts immediate serial-recall. Using isochronic presentation of irrelevant-sound stimuli during encoding and retention, recall was found to be impaired following both piano-note sequences (Experiment 1) and pure-tone sequences (Experiment 2). However, whereas intervallic organisation was determinant for pure-tones (randomly-ordered frequencies caused recall impairment while repeated frequency or ascending-frequency sequences did not) there was no effect of intervallic organisation of piano-note sequences. When the to-be-ignored sequences were presented with random anisochrony, the disruptive effect was absent for both piano notes (Experiment 3) and pure tones (Experiment 4). It is proposed that the irrelevant sound effect can be explained in terms of stimulus specific expectancy violation.

History

Volume

106

Issue

1

Start Page

1

End Page

10

Number of Pages

10

ISSN

1828-6550

Additional Rights

CC BY

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

External Author Affiliations

Catholic University of Milan, University of Messina, University Hospital of Messina, Italy

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

APMB

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