When we attend to two concurrent tasks, our performance often deteriorates because of limited attentional resources. However, it remains controversial to what extent attentional resources are supramodal or modality-specific. This study investigated the effect of sustained concentration on audiovisual interference using object-based attention tasks. In Study 1, participants engaged in dual-tasks consisting of a luminance change detection task (visual) and a vowel detection task (visual/auditory). By comparing performance in unimodal and bimodal dual-tasks, we observed a trade-off between vision and audition, suggesting at least partial recruitment of supramodal attentional resources. In Study 2, participants engaged in dual-tasks consisting of a pitch change detection task and the same vowel detection task as in Study 1. We observed little interference in the bimodal dual-task but significant interference in the unimodal dual-task. These results suggest that it is difficult to determine the recruited attentional resources from a single perspective.
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Yu Nakajima
Duncan A. WILSON
Hiroshi ASHIDA
PSYCHOLOGIA
Kyoto University
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Nakajima et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a286240a974eb0d3c00d8a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.2117/psysoc.2024-a276