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Attending to music decreases inattentional blindness
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Attending to music decreases inattentional blindness

Vanessa Beanland, R A Allen and K Pammer
Consciousness and Cognition, Vol.20(4), pp.1282-1292
2011
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2011.04.009View
Published Version

Abstract

This article investigates how auditory attention affects inattentional blindness (IB), a failure of conscious awareness in which an observer does not notice an unexpected event because their attention is engaged elsewhere. Previous research using the attentional blink paradigm has indicated that listening to music can reduce failures of conscious awareness. It was proposed that listening to music would decrease IB by reducing observers' frequency of task-unrelated thoughts (TUTs). Observers completed an IB task that varied both visual and auditory demands. Listening to music was associated with significantly lower IB, but only when observers actively attended to the music. Follow-up experiments suggest this was due to the distracting qualities of the audio task. The results also suggest a complex relationship between IB and TUTs: during demanding tasks, as predicted, noticers of the unexpected stimulus reported fewer TUTs than non-noticers. During less demanding tasks, however, noticers reported more TUTs than non-noticers. © 2011 Elsevier Inc.

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Domestic collaboration
Web Of Science research areas
Psychology, Experimental
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