Change deafness is a perceptual phenomenon that occurs when, under certain circumstances, a physical change in an
auditory stimulus goes unnoticed by the listener. There is uncertainty regarding the mechanisms by which changes to auditory stimuli go undetected, though scientific research has been done to determine the levels of processing at which these consciously undetected auditory changes are actually encoded. An understanding of the mechanisms underlying change deafness could offer insight on issues such as the completeness of our representation of the
auditory environment, the limitations of the auditory perceptual system, and the relationship between the auditory system and memory.
[Snyder JS, Gregg MK, Weintraub DM and Alain C (2012) Attention, awareness, and the perception of auditory scenes. Front. Psychology 3:15. ] The phenomenon of change deafness is thought to be related to the interactions between high and low level processes that produce conscious experiences of auditory soundscapes.
Determinants
Attention
Evidence that
attention
Attention is the behavioral and cognitive process of selectively concentrating on a discrete aspect of information, whether considered subjective or objective, while ignoring other perceivable information. William James (1890) wrote that "Atte ...
influences change deafness has been observed across a variety of auditory paradigms, including those consisting of semantic language and natural sounds. In both cases, inattention to the relevant segment of the auditory scene results in more occurrences of change-deafness, where attention may be a function of structural components of the auditory information, or cues built into the experimental design.
[Nieuwland, M., & Van Berkum, J. (2005). Testing the limits of the semantic illusion phenomenon: Erps reveal temporary semantic change deafness in discourse comprehension. Cognitive Brain Research, 24(3), 691-701. ][Eramudugolla, R., Irvine, D., McAnally, K., Martin, R., & Mattingley, J. (2005). Directed attention eliminates ‘change deafness’ in complex auditory scenes.15(12), 1108-1113. ]
Semantic evidence
In one study, participants listened to short narratives in which a man and woman converse about an inanimate object that is semantically related to the man (e.g., "tourist" and "suitcase"). In the fifth sentence of the narrative, either the woman would continue her conversation with the man (coherent continuation), or she would suddenly start talking to the inanimate object instead (anomalous continuation); except for the critical words, these continuations were identical in coherent and anomalous continuations. In both cases the critical words of the continuation were de-accented, in order to minimize
prosodic
In linguistics, prosody () is concerned with elements of speech that are not individual phonetic segments (vowels and consonants) but are properties of syllables and larger units of speech, including linguistic functions such as intonation, str ...
differences across both versions of the story. It was predicted that listeners would immediately notice the semantic change in the anomalous continuation condition, despite conditions that have been demonstrated to elicit semantic illusions, since it produces a strong discourse coherence break. This was tested using
event-related potential
An event-related potential (ERP) is the measured brain response that is the direct result of a specific sense, sensory, cognition, cognitive, or motor system, motor event. More formally, it is any stereotyped electrophysiology, electrophysiologi ...
analysis, with the expectation that the anomalous continuation would immediately elicit a large
N400 effect relative to the coherent continuation, given that semantically anomalous, or even coherent but unexpected words, have been shown to elicit significantly larger N400 effects than semantically coherent or expected words about 150–250 ms after the onset of the critical word. Contrary to this prediction, results yielded the absence of an N400 effect and the presence of a differential effect that began to emerge at approximately 500–600 ms after critical word onset. The absence of an N400 effect is interpreted as a temporary change deafness effect in which the semantic change momentarily went undetected, because of the well-established sensitivity of the N400 to very subtle differences in the relatedness of a word to its semantic context. The experimenters speculate that the initial lack of change detection is a product of strong expectations combined with input that is superficially consistent with the context, in that the anomalous word is semantically associated with the correct word and not accented in any unusual way. The differential event-related potential shows that the participants processed the change, but it took significantly longer to detect than expected.
Evidence from perception of natural sounds
Another study examined the effect of selective attention on the perception of changes to auditory scenes consisting of multiple naturalistic sounds, and found that auditory perception is limited by attention. In the task, listeners heard two versions of any auditory scene, with one object missing from the second version. Participants were either instructed to attend to a specific object, and report whether that object was missing in the second version of the scene, or to attend to all objects, and report whether any object was missing in the second scene; these are called the directed- and non-directed attention conditions respectively. Results showed that in the absence of an attentional cue, change-detection in auditory scenes consisting of more than about four objects is unreliable, where changes consist of either the disappearance of an object or a change in its location. It is important to note the ambiguity concerning the mechanism that produces the effect of attention on change-deafness, and this study suggests two possibilities. The first is that segregation of the distinct streams composing an auditory scene requires directed attention, meaning that the change-deafness effects observed in the study would reflect a difficulty in perceiving separate auditory scenes in the absence of attentional cues. A second alternative is that complex auditory scenes are initially perceived as consisting of separate streams, and thus change-deafness effects are the result of limits in encoding and storing multiple sets of auditory information for comparison with a subsequent scene.
Experience and familiarity: evidence from musical change deafness
A change detection task consisting of musical
melodies
A melody (from Greek language, Greek μελῳδία, ''melōidía'', "singing, chanting"), also tune, voice or line, is a Linearity#Music, linear succession of musical tones that the listener perceives as a single entity. In its most liter ...
of different types, namely stylistic melodies (following the normal constraints of
Classical music
Classical music generally refers to the art music of the Western world, considered to be distinct from Western folk music or popular music traditions. It is sometimes distinguished as Western classical music, as the term "classical music" also ...
), non-stylistic melodies (lacking in tonal structure), and randomly generated melodies, revealed significant effects of several interacting parameters on change-deafness. Tonal, rhythmic and
metrical structure can give emphasis to a sequence of notes, giving listeners a template on which to build a "musical gist", or a memory representation for schematically consistent tones. This experiment produced evidence supporting the prediction that a lack of musical structure makes schematic processing of the auditory information more difficult, producing more change deafness among listeners. When the melodies presented in these experiments were structurally unfamiliar, the listeners had greater difficulty encoding features of the music and were thus less able to detect changes in melody. In this task, the listeners' experience and familiarity with
Western music determined their ability to encode features of the music; however non-scale tones, as well as tones not emphasized by meter and duration, were not consistently retained in short-term memory, and thus listeners were less able to detect changes to these elements of the music.
[Agres, K., & Krumhansel, C. (2008). Musical change deafness: the inability to detect change in a non-speech auditory domain. in B.C. Love, K. McRae, & V.M. Sloutsky (Eds.), ''Proceedings of the 30th annual conference of the cognitive science society'' (pp. 975-980), Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.]
Neural correlates
One study used
fMRI
Functional magnetic resonance imaging or functional MRI (fMRI) measures brain activity by detecting changes associated with blood flow. This technique relies on the fact that cerebral blood flow and neuronal activation are coupled. When an area o ...
data to distinguish
neural correlates of physical changes in auditory input (independent of conscious change detection), from those of conscious perception of change (independent of an actual physical change). The study made use of a change deafness paradigm in which participants were exposed to complex auditory scenes consisting of six individual auditory streams differing in pitch, rhythm, and sound source location, and received a cue indicating which stream to attend to. Each participant listened to two consecutively presented auditory scenes after which they were prompted to indicate whether both scenes were identical or not. Functional
MRI
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is a medical imaging technique used in radiology to form pictures of the anatomy and the physiological processes of the body. MRI scanners use strong magnetic fields, magnetic field gradients, and radio waves ...
results revealed that physical change in stimulus was correlated with increased
BOLD
In typography, emphasis is the strengthening of words in a text with a font in a different style from the rest of the text, to highlight them. It is the equivalent of prosody stress in speech.
Methods and use
The most common methods in W ...
responses in the right auditory cortex, near the lateral portion of
Heschl's gyrus
The transverse temporal gyri, also called Heschl's gyri () or Heschl's convolutions, are gyri found in the area of primary auditory cortex buried within the lateral sulcus of the human brain, occupying Brodmann areas 41 and 42. Transverse tempora ...
, the first cortical structure to process incoming auditory information, but not in hierarchically higher brain regions.
[Puschmann, S., Weerda, R., Klump, G., & Thiel, C. (2013). Segregating the neural correlates of physical and perceived change in auditory input using the change deafness effect. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 25(5), 730-742. ] Conscious change detection was correlated with increased coupled responses in the ACC and the right insula, consistent with additional evidence that the anterior insula functions to mediate dynamic interactions between other brain networks involved in attention to external stimuli, forming a salience network with the ACC that identifies salient stimulus events and initiates additional processing.
[Menon V, Uddin LQ (2010) Saliency, switching, attention and control: a network model of insula function. Brain Struct Funct 214: 655-667. ] In absence of change detection, this salience network was not activated; however increased activity in other
cortical areas suggests that undetected changes are still perceived on some level, but fail to trigger conscious change detection, thus producing the change deafness phenomenon.
Additional studies of change deafness have generated evidence in support of the prediction that undetected changes are successfully encoded at the sensory level in the auditory cortex, but do not trigger later change-related cortical responses that would produce conscious perception of change.
EEG
Electroencephalography (EEG) is a method to record an electrogram of the spontaneous electrical activity of the brain. The biosignals detected by EEG have been shown to represent the postsynaptic potentials of pyramidal neurons in the neocortex ...
analysis during a change-detection task using changes in
pitch revealed that responses previously shown to be involved with sensory extraction of pitch information increased during both detected and undetected pitch changes in auditory input, however only in cases where the pitch change was detected were later processing stages triggered, originating from hierarchically higher non-sensory brain regions. These findings suggest that change deafness does not arise from a deficit in initial sensory encoding of changed stimulus features in auditory cortex but occurs at a higher level of stimulus processing in auditory cortex, resulting in a failure to trigger auditory change detection mechanisms.
[Puschmann, S., Sandmann, P., Ahrens, J., Thorne, J., Weerda, R., Klump, G., Debener, S., & Thiel, C. (2013). Electrophysiological correlates of auditory change detection and change deafness in complex auditory scenes. Neuroimage, 75(15), 155-164. ]
See also
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Auditory scene analysis
In perception and psychophysics, auditory scene analysis (ASA) is a proposed model for the basis of auditory perception. This is understood as the process by which the human auditory system organizes sound into perceptually meaningful elements. T ...
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Change blindness
Change blindness is a perceptual phenomenon that occurs when a change in a visual stimulus is introduced and the observer does not notice it. For example, observers often fail to notice major differences introduced into an image while it flickers ...
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Cognitive inhibition
Cognitive inhibition refers to the mind's ability to tune out stimuli that are irrelevant to the task/process at hand or to the mind's current state. Cognitive inhibition can be done either in whole or in part, intentionally or otherwise. Cognitive ...
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Selective auditory attention
Selective auditory attention or selective hearing is a type of selective attention and involves the auditory system. Selective hearing is characterized as the action in which people focus their attention intentionally on a specific source of a sou ...
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Stimulus filtering
References
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Attention
Consciousness studies