Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening

Two hundred and eight Ss from grades 2, 4, and 6 were tested for recognition of dichotically presented musical stimuli, sound effects, and CVC nonsense syllables differing in medial vowel or initial stop consonant. Ear asymmetry was found to increase from grade 2 to grade 6. The left-ear advantage f...

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Main Author: Neufeld, Gordon Arthur
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34427
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-344272018-01-05T17:47:28Z Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening Neufeld, Gordon Arthur Hearing Speech perception Two hundred and eight Ss from grades 2, 4, and 6 were tested for recognition of dichotically presented musical stimuli, sound effects, and CVC nonsense syllables differing in medial vowel or initial stop consonant. Ear asymmetry was found to increase from grade 2 to grade 6. The left-ear advantage found for music, sound effects, and vowel-varied stimuli was due to decreasing right-ear performance with age. A right-ear advantage for consonants was the result of increasing right-ear performance and a simultaneous decrease in left-ear performance with age. These results were discussed in terms of a unilateral dominance specific for speech as opposed to a bilateral dominance for both speech and nonspeech material. Sex differences were found in the development of ear asymmetry, girls showing ear asymmetry earlier than boys in the recognition of verbal material and boys showing ear asymmetry earlier than girls in the recognition of sound effects. The results of the study were compared with those of a similar study using adults as Ss. The comparison showed that substantially larger ear asymmetries were obtained with grade 6 Ss than with adults. This difference was found to be due to the children's inferior recognition of stimuli presented to the nonpreferred ear, preferred ear performance being the same for both groups. The possibility of a covert order of report factor influencing the magnitude of the ear asymmetry found was suggested. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2011-05-10T22:34:14Z 2011-05-10T22:34:14Z 1971 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34427 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Hearing
Speech perception
spellingShingle Hearing
Speech perception
Neufeld, Gordon Arthur
Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
description Two hundred and eight Ss from grades 2, 4, and 6 were tested for recognition of dichotically presented musical stimuli, sound effects, and CVC nonsense syllables differing in medial vowel or initial stop consonant. Ear asymmetry was found to increase from grade 2 to grade 6. The left-ear advantage found for music, sound effects, and vowel-varied stimuli was due to decreasing right-ear performance with age. A right-ear advantage for consonants was the result of increasing right-ear performance and a simultaneous decrease in left-ear performance with age. These results were discussed in terms of a unilateral dominance specific for speech as opposed to a bilateral dominance for both speech and nonspeech material. Sex differences were found in the development of ear asymmetry, girls showing ear asymmetry earlier than boys in the recognition of verbal material and boys showing ear asymmetry earlier than girls in the recognition of sound effects. The results of the study were compared with those of a similar study using adults as Ss. The comparison showed that substantially larger ear asymmetries were obtained with grade 6 Ss than with adults. This difference was found to be due to the children's inferior recognition of stimuli presented to the nonpreferred ear, preferred ear performance being the same for both groups. The possibility of a covert order of report factor influencing the magnitude of the ear asymmetry found was suggested. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Neufeld, Gordon Arthur
author_facet Neufeld, Gordon Arthur
author_sort Neufeld, Gordon Arthur
title Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
title_short Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
title_full Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
title_fullStr Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
title_full_unstemmed Development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
title_sort development of ear asymmetries in dichotic listening
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/34427
work_keys_str_mv AT neufeldgordonarthur developmentofearasymmetriesindichoticlistening
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