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Effects of Auditory Attention Training with the Dichotic Listening Task: Behavioural and Neurophysiological Evidence
Authors:Jussi Tallus  Anna Soveri  Heikki H?m?l?inen  Jyrki Tuomainen  Matti Laine
Affiliation:1 Department of Psychology, Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, and Turku Brain and Mind Center, University of Turku, Turku, Finland, ; 2 Department of Psychology, Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland, ; 3 Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, Faculty of Brain Sciences, University College London, London, United Kingdom, ; University of British Columbia, CANADA,
Abstract:Facilitation of general cognitive capacities such as executive functions through training has stirred considerable research interest during the last decade. Recently we demonstrated that training of auditory attention with forced attention dichotic listening not only facilitated that performance but also generalized to an untrained attentional task. In the present study, 13 participants underwent a 4-week dichotic listening training programme with instructions to report syllables presented to the left ear (FL training group). Another group (n = 13) was trained using the non-forced instruction, asked to report whichever syllable they heard the best (NF training group). The study aimed to replicate our previous behavioural results, and to explore the neurophysiological correlates of training through event-related brain potentials (ERPs). We partially replicated our previous behavioural training effects, as the FL training group tended to show more allocation of auditory spatial attention to the left ear in a standard dichotic listening task. ERP measures showed diminished N1 and enhanced P2 responses to dichotic stimuli after training in both groups, interpreted as improvement in early perceptual processing of the stimuli. Additionally, enhanced anterior N2 amplitudes were found after training, with relatively larger changes in the FL training group in the forced-left condition, suggesting improved top-down control on the trained task. These results show that top-down cognitive training can modulate the left-right allocation of auditory spatial attention, accompanied by a change in an evoked brain potential related to cognitive control.
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