Abstract

The control of attention is an important part of our executive functions and enables us to focus on relevant information and to ignore irrelevant information. The ability to shield against distraction by task-irrelevant sounds is suggested to mature during school age. The present study investigated the developmental time course of distraction in three groups of children aged 7–10 years. Two different types of distractor sounds that have been frequently used in auditory attention research—novel environmental and pitch-deviant sounds—were presented within an oddball paradigm while children performed a visual categorization task. Reaction time measurements revealed decreasing distractor-related impairment with age. Novel environmental sounds impaired performance in the categorization task more than pitch-deviant sounds. The youngest children showed a pronounced decline of novel-related distraction effects throughout the experimental session. Such a significant decline as a result of practice was not observed in the pitch-deviant condition and not in older children. We observed no correlation between cross-modal distraction effects and performance in standardized tests of concentration and visual distraction. Results of the cross-modal distraction paradigm indicate that separate mechanisms underlying the processing of novel environmental and pitch-deviant sounds develop with different time courses and that these mechanisms develop considerably within a few years in middle childhood.

Highlights

  • Attention as a function of cognitive control plays a key role in the acquisition of knowledge about the world

  • We expected that children who have a high performance score in the standardized tests to show improved performance in the present experimental distraction task and reduced distraction effects

  • The effects of the ongoing maturation of involuntary attention mechanisms were observed on the behavioral level in children aged 7–10 years

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Summary

Introduction

Attention as a function of cognitive control plays a key role in the acquisition of knowledge about the world. Selective attention abilities are relevant in particular for academic achievement (Stevens and Bavelier, 2012). It can be expected that attention processes operate in part differently in the visual and auditory modality as well as cross-modally (Gomes et al, 2000). The present study systematically investigated primary school children’s ability to shield against distraction by different types of task-irrelevant sounds while they performed a task. Results of the study enhance our knowledge on the developmental pathway of the control of attention in a cross-modal situation, where auditory distractors are supposed to interfere with a visual primary task

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