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Original Articles

Self-relevance increases the irrelevant sound effect: Attentional disruption by one's own name

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Pages 925-931 | Received 01 Mar 2013, Accepted 01 Jul 2013, Published online: 02 Sep 2013

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Read on this site (7)

Nick Perham, Fahena Begum & John E. Marsh. (2023) The Categorical Deviation Effect May Be Underpinned by Attentional Capture: Preliminary Evidence from the Incidental Recognition of Distracters. Auditory Perception & Cognition 6:1-2, pages 20-51.
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Beth Richardson, Kathleen C. McCulloch, Linden J. Ball & John E. Marsh. (2023) The Fate of the Unattended Revisited: Can Irrelevant Speech Prime the Non-dominant Interpretation of Homophones?. Auditory Perception & Cognition 6:1-2, pages 72-96.
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Philipp Radloff & Judith Schweppe. (2023) Process-Sensitivity of the Changing-State Effect – Three Methodological Issues Regarding the Current Evidence Base. Auditory Perception & Cognition 6:1-2, pages 2-19.
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John E. Marsh, Florian Kattner & Philipp Ruhnau. (2021) Research Collection: On Theoretical Advancement in Auditory Distraction Research. Auditory Perception & Cognition 4:3-4, pages 133-138.
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Jan Philipp Röer, Axel Buchner & Raoul Bell. (2019) Auditory Distraction in Short-term Memory: Stable Effects of Semantic Mismatches on Serial Recall. Auditory Perception & Cognition 2:3, pages 143-162.
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Glyn W. Humphreys & Jie Sui. (2016) Attentional control and the self: The Self-Attention Network (SAN). Cognitive Neuroscience 7:1-4, pages 5-17.
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Articles from other publishers (40)

Adi Brown, Danna Pinto, Ksenia Burgart, Yair Zvilichovsky & Elana Zion-Golumbic. (2023) Neurophysiological Evidence for Semantic Processing of Irrelevant Speech and Own-Name Detection in a Virtual Café. The Journal of Neuroscience 43:27, pages 5045-5056.
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Sheila J Cunningham, Zahra Ahmed, Joshua March, Karen Golden, Charlotte Wilks, Josephine Ross & Janet F McLean. (2023) Put you in the problem: Effects of self-pronouns on mathematical problem-solving. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, pages 174702182311742.
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Florian Kattner, Sarah Hanl, Linda Paul & Wolfgang Ellermeier. (2022) Task-specific auditory distraction in serial recall and mental arithmetic. Memory & Cognition 51:4, pages 930-951.
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Danna Pinto, Maya Kaufman, Adi Brown & Elana Zion Golumbic. (2023) An ecological investigation of the capacity to follow simultaneous speech and preferential detection of ones’ own name. Cerebral Cortex 33:9, pages 5361-5374.
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Antonia F. Ten Brink, Rebecca de Haan, Daan R. Amelink, Anniek N. Holweg, Jie Sui & Janet H. Bultitude. (2023) Visuospatial perception is not affected by self-related information. Consciousness and Cognition 107, pages 103451.
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Alexander L. Francis. (2022) Adding noise is a confounded nuisance. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 152:3, pages 1375-1388.
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Althea Kaminske, Adam Brown, Anna Aylward & Mckenzie Haller. (2022) Cell Phone Notifications Harm Attention: An Exploration of the Factors that Contribute to Distraction. European Journal of Educational Research 11:3, pages 1487-1494.
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Nicholas E. Souter, Sara Stampacchia, Glyn Hallam, Hannah Thompson, Jonathan Smallwood & Elizabeth Jefferies. (2022) Motivated semantic control: Exploring the effects of extrinsic reward and self‐reference on semantic retrieval in semantic aphasia. Journal of Neuropsychology 16:2, pages 407-433.
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Ulrich Ansorge, Diane Baier & Soonja Choi. (2022) Linguistic Skill and Stimulus-Driven Attention: A Case for Linguistic Relativity. Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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Lejla Alikadic & Jan Philipp Röer. (2022) Loud Auditory Distractors Are More Difficult to Ignore After All. Experimental Psychology 69:3, pages 163-171.
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Stefan Wiens. (2021) Dissociation Between Speech and Emotion Effects in Short-Term Memory: A Data Reanalysis.. Meta-Psychology 5.
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Kenneth J. BarideauxJrJr & Philip I. PavlikJrJr. (2021) Can concept maps attenuate auditory distraction when studying with music?. Applied Cognitive Psychology 35:6, pages 1547-1558.
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Ken Yaoi, Mariko Osaka & Naoyuki Osaka. (2021) Does Implicit Self-Reference Effect Occur by the Instantaneous Own-Name?. Frontiers in Psychology 12.
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Marius Golubickis, Linn M. Persson, Johanna K. Falbén & C. Neil Macrae. (2021) On stopping yourself: Self-relevance facilitates response inhibition. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 83:4, pages 1416-1423.
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Ella Braat-Eggen, Marijke Keus v.d. Poll, Maarten Hornikx & Armin Kohlrausch. (2019) Auditory distraction in open-plan study environments: Effects of background speech and reverberation time on a collaboration task. Applied Acoustics 154, pages 148-160.
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Josef Schlittenlacher, Katharina Staab, Özlem Çelebi, Alisa Samel & Wolfgang Ellermeier. (2019) Determinants of the irrelevant speech effect: Changes in spectrum and envelope. The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 145:6, pages 3625-3632.
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Jens Kreitewolf, Malte Wöstmann, Sarah Tune, Michael Plöchl & Jonas Obleser. (2019) Working-memory disruption by task-irrelevant talkers depends on degree of talker familiarity. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics 81:4, pages 1108-1118.
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Ulrike Körner, Jan P Röer, Axel Buchner & Raoul Bell. (2018) Time of presentation affects auditory distraction: Changing-state and deviant sounds disrupt similar working memory processes. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 72:3, pages 457-471.
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Brittan A. Barker & Emily M. Elliott. (2019) The Role of Talker Familiarity in Auditory Distraction. Experimental Psychology 66:1, pages 1-11.
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Josh Dorsi, Navin Viswanathan, Lawrence D Rosenblum & James W Dias. (2018) The role of speech fidelity in the irrelevant sound effect: Insights from noise-vocoded speech backgrounds. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 71:10, pages 2152-2161.
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Sheila J. Cunningham, Lynda Scott, Jacqui Hutchison, Josephine Ross & Douglas Martin. (2018) Applying self-processing biases in education: Improving learning through ownership.. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 7:3, pages 342-351.
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Jan P. Röer, Raoul Bell, Ulrike Körner & Axel Buchner. (2018) Equivalent auditory distraction in children and adults. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology 172, pages 41-58.
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François Vachon, Alexandre Marois, Michaël Lévesque-Dion, Maxime Legendre & Jean Saint-Aubin. (2018) Can ‘Hebb’ Be Distracted? Testing the Susceptibility of Sequence Learning to Auditory Distraction. Journal of Cognition 2:1.
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Jan Philipp Röer, Jan Rummel, Raoul Bell & Axel Buchner. (2017) Metacognition in Auditory Distraction: How Expectations about Distractibility Influence the Irrelevant Sound Effect. Journal of Cognition 1:1.
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Ulrike Körner, Jan P. Röer, Axel Buchner & Raoul Bell. (2017) Working memory capacity is equally unrelated to auditory distraction by changing-state and deviant sounds. Journal of Memory and Language 96, pages 122-137.
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Maciej Hanczakowski, C. Philip Beaman & Dylan M. Jones. (2017) When distraction benefits memory through semantic similarity. Journal of Memory and Language 94, pages 61-74.
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Jie Sui & Glyn W. Humphreys. (2017) The ubiquitous self: what the properties of self-bias tell us about the self. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1396:1, pages 222-235.
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Pamela BaessWolfgang Prinz. (2017) Face/Agent Interference in Individual and Social Context. Social Cognition 35:2, pages 146-162.
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Helga de la Motte-Haber. 2017. Handbuch Funktionale Musik. Handbuch Funktionale Musik 3 28 .
Axel Buchner & Martin Brandt. 2017. Allgemeine Psychologie. Allgemeine Psychologie 401 434 .
Jan P. Röer, Ulrike Körner, Axel Buchner & Raoul Bell. (2016) Semantic priming by irrelevant speech. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
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Nick Perham, John E. Marsh, Martin Clarkson, Rosie Lawrence & Patrik Sörqvist. (2016) Distraction of Mental Arithmetic by Background Speech. Experimental Psychology 63:3, pages 141-149.
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Emily M. Elliott, Robert W. Hughes, Alicia Briganti, Tanya N. Joseph, John E. Marsh & Bill Macken. (2016) Distraction in verbal short-term memory: Insights from developmental differences. Journal of Memory and Language 88, pages 39-50.
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Helga de la Motte-Haber. 2017. Handbuch Funktionale Musik. Handbuch Funktionale Musik 1 26 .
Patrik Sörqvist. (2015) On interpretation and task selection: the sub-component hypothesis of cognitive noise effects. Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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Jessica K. Ljungberg, Fabrice B.R. Parmentier, Dylan M. Jones, Erik Marsja & Gregory Neely. (2014) ‘What’s in a name?’ ‘No more than when it's mine own’. Evidence from auditory oddball distraction. Acta Psychologica 150, pages 161-166.
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Jan P. Röer, Raoul Bell & Axel Buchner. (2013) Evidence for habituation of the irrelevant-sound effect on serial recall. Memory & Cognition 42:4, pages 609-621.
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John E. Marsh, Jan P. R?er, Raoul Bell & Axel Buchner. (2014) Predictability and distraction: Does the neural model represent postcategorical features?. PsyCh Journal 3:1, pages 58-71.
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Robert W. Hughes. (2014) Auditory distraction: A duplex-mechanism account. PsyCh Journal 3:1, pages 30-41.
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Jan P. Röer, Raoul Bell & Axel Buchner. (2014) What Determines Auditory Distraction? On the Roles of Local Auditory Changes and Expectation Violations. PLoS ONE 9:1, pages e84166.
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