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Dichotic and bisensory grouping effects

The relationship between the Gray and Wedderburn effect, the channel alternation effect and the class alternation effect was studied in dichotic and bisensory experiments using physically and semantically distinguishable word classes. With dichotic presentation all three effects were found to occur,...

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Published in:Quarterly journal of experimental psychology 1980-05, Vol.32 (2), p.295-306
Main Author: Hede, Andrew J.
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Language:English
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description The relationship between the Gray and Wedderburn effect, the channel alternation effect and the class alternation effect was studied in dichotic and bisensory experiments using physically and semantically distinguishable word classes. With dichotic presentation all three effects were found to occur, but with bisensory presentation neither the Gray and Wedderburn effect nor the class alternation effect was detected. There were no significant differences between physically and semantically based grouping. The present investigation provides support for Broadbent's claim that the Gray and Wedderburn effect depends on the occurrence of the class alternation effect. The various dichotic and bisensory grouping effects are explicable in terms of selection by modality-specific processing systems. National Acoustic Laboratories, Hickson Road, Miller's Point, N.S.W., 2000, Australia.
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source Taylor & Francis Behavioral Science Archive 2015
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Dominance, Cerebral
Female
Humans
Male
Memory
Mental Recall
Middle Aged
Semantics
Speech Perception
title Dichotic and bisensory grouping effects
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