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Proceedings Fonetik 2009 - Institutionen för lingvistik

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<strong>Proceedings</strong>, FONETIK <strong>2009</strong>, Dept. of Linguistics, Stockholm UniversityAuditory white noise enhances cognitive performanceunder certain conditions: Examples from visuo-spatialworking memory and dichotic listening tasksGöran G. B. W. Söderlund, Ellen Marklund, and Francisco LacerdaDepartment of Linguistics, Stockholm University, StockholmAbstractThis study examines when external auditivenoise can enhance performance in a dichoticlistening and a visuo-spatial working memorytask. Noise is typically conceived of as beingdetrimental for cognitive performance; however,given the mechanism of stochastic resonance(SR), a certain amount of noise can benefitperformance. In particular we predict thatlow performers will be aided by noise whereashigh performers decline in performance duringthe same condition. Data from two experimentswill be presented; participants were students atStockholm University.IntroductionAimThe aim of this study is to further investigatethe effects of auditory white noise on attentionand cognitive performance in a normal population.Earlier research from our laboratory hasfound that noise exposure can, under certainprescribed settings, be beneficial for performancein cognitive tasks, in particular for individualswith attentional problems such as AttentionDeficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)(Söderlund et al., 2007). Positive effects ofnoise was also found in a normal population ofschool children among inattentive or lowachieving children (Söderlund & Sikström,2008). The purpose of this study is to includetwo cognitive tasks that has not earlier beenperformed under noise exposure. The first taskis the dichotic listening paradigm that measuresattention and cognitive control. The secondtask is a visuo-spatial working memory test thatmeasures working memory performance.Participants were students at Stockholm University.BackgroundIt has long been known that, under most circumstances,cognitive processing is easily disturbedby environmental noise and non-taskcompatible distractors (Broadbent, 1958). Theeffects hold across a wide variety of tasks, distractorsand participant populations (e.g. Bomanet al., 2005; Hygge et al., 2003). In contrastto the main body of evidence regardingdistractors and noise, there has been a numberof reports of counterintuitive findings. ADHDchildren performed better on arithmetic’s whenexposed to rock music (Abikoff et al., 1996;Gerjets et al., 2002). Children with low socioeconomicstatus and from crowded householdsperformed better on memory test when exposedto road traffic noise (Stansfeld et al., 2005).These studies did not, however, provide satisfactorytheoretical account for the beneficialeffect of noise, only referring to general increaseof arousal and general appeal counteractingboredom.Signaling in the brain is noisy, but thebrain possesses a remarkable ability to distinguishthe information carrying signal from thesurrounding, irrelevant noise. A fundamentalmechanism that contributes to this process isthe phenomenon of stochastic resonance (SR).SR is the counterintuitive phenomenon ofnoise-improved detection of weak signals in thecentral nervous system. SR makes a weak signal,below the hearing threshold, detectablewhen external auditory noise is added (Moss etal., 2004). In humans, SR has also been foundin the sensory modalities of touch (Wells et al.,2005), hearing (Zeng et al., 2000), and vision(Simonotto et al., 1999), all in which moderatenoise has been shown to improve sensory discrimination.However, the effect is not restrictedto sensory processing as SR has alsobeen found in higher functions e.g., auditorynoise improved the speed of arithmetic computationsin a group of school children (Usher &Feingold, 2000). SR is usually quantified byplotting detection of a weak signal, or cognitiveperformance, as a function of noise intensity.This relation exhibits an inverted U-curve,where performance peaks at a moderate noiselevel. That is, moderate noise is beneficial forperformance whereas too much, or too littlenoise, attenuates performance.160

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