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Original Articles

Reduction in auditory distraction by retrieval strategy

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Pages 465-473 | Received 27 Apr 2006, Published online: 27 Apr 2007
 

Abstract

Most research on auditory distraction on task performance focuses on those features of the sound that determine a drop in efficiency, with scant regard for examining the processing properties inherent in the focal task. We report how one such property, retrieval strategy, can also influence the degree of disruption by background sound. Using a task that called for the retrieval of realistic train journey information, we showed that retrieval by categories of verbal sequences was not susceptible to disruption by office sound—65–75 dB(A). However, versions of the task requiring either free or serial recall showed evidence of disruption, a pattern of results consistent with the changing-state account of the irrelevant sound effect, which highlights the key role of serial rehearsal in determining disruption.

Acknowledgements

The research reported in this article received financial support from the United Kingdom's Economic and Social Research Council, reference number R000239850. We thank Robert Hughes for critical readings of early drafts of this article.

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