Asymmetry in Auditory Priming: Evidence from the Perception of Words, Sounds, and Talkers Julio González Álvarez 3rd Iberian Conference on Perception – CIP Guimaraes July Guimaraes, Portugal Conor T. M c Lennan
Stimulus X HOUSE
Stimulus X’ Stimulus X house HOUSE ?
Is Priming attenuated ? ? No Yes Specificity
No Yes Specificity Visual Domain
Abstract- Category Subsystem Visual Domain Specific- Exemplar Subsystem less sensitive to surface changes more sensitive to surface changes Marsolek (1999, 2003, 2004);… Marsolek & Burgund (2008)
Marsolek (1999, 2003, 2004) different specific categories piano one abstract category
Long-term Repetition Priming 1st block (primes) 2nd block (targets) Distracter task ++
Long-term Repetition Priming 1st block (primes) 2nd block (targets) Distracter task ++ Same exemplar
Long-term Repetition Priming 1st block (primes) 2nd block (targets) Distracter task ++ Different exemplar
Long-term Repetition Priming 1st block (primes) 2nd block (targets) Distracter task ++ Control (Unprimed)
Marsolek, (1999). Psychological Science.
The RH was more sensitive than the LH to a change of exemplar. Marsolek, (1999). Psychological Science. NS
(Burgund & Marsolek, 2000) depth-orientation view
Burgund & Marsolek, (2000). Marsolek, (1999). Marsolek & Burgund, (2003). Marsolek, (2004). Marsolek et al., (1992). Marsolek, Schacter, & Nicholas, (1996). Marsolek, Squire, Kosslyn, & Lulenski, (1994). Burgund & Marsolek, (1997). Marsolek, (1995). Marsolek & Burgund (2008). Objects Words Pseudowords Letterlike forms Unfamiliar 3D forms
Neuropsychology Electrophysiology fMRI Beeri, Vakil, Adonsky, & Levenkron (2004); Farah (1991). Pickering & Schweinberger (2003) Koutstaal et al., (2001), Vuilleumier et al., (2002)
Only in Visual Domain ?
In a continuously changing environment, it is important to categorize the objects and events in one's surroundings in both abstract and specific terms, and this requirement is not exclusive to any one sensory modality
Neuroimaging studies of Auditory and Visual Priming show activity changes (reduction) in cortical areas involved in multimodal functions Buckner, et al., (2000). Carlesimo et al. (2004) a review in Schacter et al. (2004).
Auditory Domain ?
González, J. & McLennan, C.T. (2007). Hemispheric Differences in Indexical Specificity Effects in Spoken Word Recognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 33, Spoken Words
Experimental Design Block 1 Block 2 Same voice dedo Different voice dedo Control dedo pino Long-term Repetition Priming
Block 1Block 2 Distrater task Monaural Binaural foca
LE- Left Ear (RH- Right Hemisphere) : Specificity (Same voice > Different Voice) Hypothesis (Asymmetric pattern): RE- Right Ear (LH-Left Hemisphere) : No Specificity (Same voice = Different Voice)
Lexical Decision (LH) (RH) Not sensitive Sensitive to the voice change (specificity)
Stem Completion (LH) (RH): : Not sensitive Sensitive to the voice change (specificity)
González, J. & McLennan, C.T. (2009). Hemispheric Differences in the Recognition of Environmental Sounds. Psychological Science, in press. 2. Environmental Sounds Only for linguistic stimuli?
everyday nonverbal acoustic events: animals, people, musical instruments, tools, and other objects 2. Environmental Sounds
Experimental Design Block 1 Block 2 Control Same exemplar Different exemplar
Task: to identify the target from an initial 750 ms sound stem Block 2 Block 1 Identification task Pleasantness-rating task
NS RE (LH): Not sensitive LE (RH): Sensitive to a change of exemplar *
Different Tasks in Block 1 Noise – No Noise in the opposite ear (Block 2) ** *.08 NS
González, J., Cervera, T., & McLennan, C.T. : Work in progress. 3. Talker Identity
8 Talkers unknown for the participants: 4 males + 4 females read two sentences: (A) “Procura mantener el aire limpio” (B)“¿Vienes mañana al estreno de la película? Stimuli
1. Familiarization phase Distracter task 2. Test phase (Talker identification) Procedure similar to the procedure followed by Perrachione & Wong, (2007a, b)
Familiarization phase: Perrachione & Wong, (2007a, b) Participants practiced identifying the talkers throughout a set of quiz sessions with feedback : 1- Only male talkers 2- Only female talkers 3- Males and females
Pulsa un Número Test phase:
Experimental Design Familiarization Test Same sentence (A) Different sentence (A) (B) Binaural Monaural (Noise in the opposite ear)
Experimental Design Familiarization Test Same sentence (B) Different sentence (B) (A) Binaural Monaural (Noise in the opposite ear)
Experimental Design within-participant 2 x 2 (same, different sentence) x (left, right ear)
Participants 32 participants right-handed (Edinburgh Handedness Inventory, Oldfield, 1971)
Results NS RE (LH): Not sensitive LE (RH): Sensitive to a change of sentence **
Same conditions Except: NO NOISE in the opposite ear (Test) Experiment II
Participants New 32 participants right-handed (Edinburgh Handedness Inventory, Oldfield, 1971)
Results NS RE (LH): Not sensitive LE (RH): Sensitive to a change of sentence *
Asymmetry in Priming: A general property?
Neurocomputational simulations: Dual Model Less densely distributed (more “tunned”) simple features few common to many exemplars More densely distributed complex patterns many not common across exemplars Marsolek (2003)
Jung-Beeman (2005) Hustler (2002)
Further research: Aymmetric priming Other Auditory subdomains (abstract sounds, tones, noises, etc) Other Modalities (touch,…) Specificity in tactile recognition is greater when objects are handled with the left hand (RH) than when they are handled with the right hand (LH) ?
Thanks for your attention
The widespread existence of specificity effects in several domains could imply that specificity has an adaptive value and might be associated with some type of cognitive- resource conservation Schacter, Dobbins, & Schnyer (2004). Nature Reviews. Neuroscience.