New projects on real-world distractability

Two groups of final year students are currently setting up their research projects in the lab. Both will be looking at the relationship between people’s real-world distractability and their performance on lab-based auditory attention tasks. Lucie, Lizzie, Ben and Lauren are using an auditory flanker task (developed by Sandra as part of her PhD work). Kayleigh, Sarunas and Kathy are using an auditory attentional capture task.

Welcome to the lab everyone and good luck with your projects!

Thank you to our actors

Our test of auditory awareness features five actors who have so far remained anonymous. They were all members of our department at the time and they patiently put up with our demanding yet incompetent direction for several hours, to achieve the 69 second clip that we used in the final experiment. It is high time we acknowledged their contributions!

‘The women’s conversation’: Jac Billington and Samantha McCormick

‘The men’s conversation’: Charles Hounsell and Damian Poulter

‘The gorilla’: David Kelly

Inattentional deafness

We are very excited about the continuing interest in our recent article. This work has been featured on NBC’s The Body Odd and in the latest issue of the BPS research digest. It is also being discussed on a range of other interesting blogs. (Polly has recently commented on one of these, to clarify the relationship between our work and the dichotic listening research of the 1950s and 60s).

New paper

Our article about people’s failure to notice an auditory ‘gorilla man’ when paying attention to something else will shortly be published in Cognition. You can listen to a demo here. Remember to use headphones for the full 3D effect! More details coming soon.