{"title":"Auditory Attention","authors":"C. Beaman","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.013.778","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The modern world is noisy. Streets are cacophonies of traffic noise; homes and workplaces are replete with bleeping timers, announcements, and alarms. Everywhere there is the sound of human speech—from the casual chatter of strangers and the unwanted intrusion from electronic devices through to the conversations with friends and loved ones one may actually wish to hear. Unlike vision, it is not possible simply to “close our ears” and shut out the auditory world and nor, in many cases, is it desirable. On the one hand, soft background music or environmental sounds, such as birdsong or the noise of waves against the beach, is often comfortingly pleasurable or reassuring. On the other, alarms are usually auditory for a reason. Nevertheless, people somehow have to identify, from among the babble that surrounds them, the sounds and speech of interest and importance and to follow the thread of a chosen speaker in a crowded auditory environment. Additionally, irrelevant or unwanted chatter or other background noise should not hinder concentration on matters of greater interest or importance—students should ideally be able to study effectively despite noisy classrooms or university halls while still being open to the possibility of important interruptions from elsewhere. The scientific study of auditory attention has been driven by such practical problems: how people somehow manage to select the most interesting or most relevant speaker from the competing auditory demands made by the speech of others or isolate the music of the band from the chatter of the nightclub. In parallel, the causes of auditory distraction—and how to try to avoid it where necessary—have also been subject to scrutiny. A complete theory of auditory attention must account for the mechanisms by which selective attention is achieved, the causes of auditory distraction, and the reasons why individuals might differ in their ability in both cases.","PeriodicalId":339030,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology","volume":"72 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"9","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Psychology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190236557.013.778","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 9

Abstract

The modern world is noisy. Streets are cacophonies of traffic noise; homes and workplaces are replete with bleeping timers, announcements, and alarms. Everywhere there is the sound of human speech—from the casual chatter of strangers and the unwanted intrusion from electronic devices through to the conversations with friends and loved ones one may actually wish to hear. Unlike vision, it is not possible simply to “close our ears” and shut out the auditory world and nor, in many cases, is it desirable. On the one hand, soft background music or environmental sounds, such as birdsong or the noise of waves against the beach, is often comfortingly pleasurable or reassuring. On the other, alarms are usually auditory for a reason. Nevertheless, people somehow have to identify, from among the babble that surrounds them, the sounds and speech of interest and importance and to follow the thread of a chosen speaker in a crowded auditory environment. Additionally, irrelevant or unwanted chatter or other background noise should not hinder concentration on matters of greater interest or importance—students should ideally be able to study effectively despite noisy classrooms or university halls while still being open to the possibility of important interruptions from elsewhere. The scientific study of auditory attention has been driven by such practical problems: how people somehow manage to select the most interesting or most relevant speaker from the competing auditory demands made by the speech of others or isolate the music of the band from the chatter of the nightclub. In parallel, the causes of auditory distraction—and how to try to avoid it where necessary—have also been subject to scrutiny. A complete theory of auditory attention must account for the mechanisms by which selective attention is achieved, the causes of auditory distraction, and the reasons why individuals might differ in their ability in both cases.
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听觉的注意力
现代世界是嘈杂的。街道上充斥着交通噪音;家庭和工作场所充斥着哔哔作响的计时器、公告和闹钟。到处都有人类说话的声音——从陌生人的闲聊和电子设备的干扰,到与朋友和亲人的交谈,人们实际上可能希望听到。与视觉不同,不可能简单地“闭上我们的耳朵”,把听觉世界拒之门外,而且在许多情况下,这也是不可取的。一方面,柔和的背景音乐或环境声音,如鸟鸣或海浪拍打海滩的声音,通常是令人愉快或安心的。另一方面,警报通常是听觉的,这是有原因的。尽管如此,人们还是不得不从周围的嘈杂声中识别出感兴趣和重要的声音和话语,并在拥挤的听觉环境中跟随选定的演讲者的线索。此外,不相关或不受欢迎的闲聊或其他背景噪音不应妨碍学生集中精力学习更感兴趣或更重要的事情——理想情况下,学生应该能够在嘈杂的教室或大学大厅中有效地学习,同时仍然对其他地方可能出现的重要干扰保持开放的态度。对听觉注意的科学研究一直受到这样一些实际问题的推动:人们如何设法从别人的演讲所提出的竞争性听觉要求中选择出最有趣或最相关的演讲者,或者将乐队的音乐与夜总会的嘈杂声区分开。与此同时,听觉分心的原因——以及如何在必要时避免它——也受到了仔细研究。一个完整的听觉注意理论必须解释选择性注意的实现机制,听觉分心的原因,以及个体在这两种情况下能力不同的原因。
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