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Seaborne, Amanda; Fiorella, Logan – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2018
Misophonia refers to one's sensitivity to specific sounds, which can range from minor annoyance to extreme distress. This experiment tested the role of individual differences in misophonia sensitivity on learning. College students read a text passage about migraines in a quiet room with 2 or 3 other participants and 1 confederate. In some…
Descriptors: Acoustics, Sensory Experience, Individual Differences, College Students
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Flavin, Michael; James, Bethany – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2018
This paper reports on a case study which aims to recreate the hearing voices symptom in schizophrenia. The case study was submitted for a co-curricular module at King's College London by a first-year undergraduate Music student, Bethany James, and was created using the web application, Mahara. The core of the case study consists of a soundscape of…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Schizophrenia, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Acoustics
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Elkoshi, Rivka – Music Education Research, 2019
The purpose of this study is the exploration of pitch-height mapping via invented notations rendered by schoolchildren and adults with and without formal musical training, while they listen to a classical composition, characterised by pitch-height polarity. Subjects (N = 108) include first-graders, fourth-graders, undergraduate and graduate…
Descriptors: Music Education, Acoustics, Grade 1, Grade 4
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Winstone, Naomi; Davis, Alyson; De Bruyn, Bart – Infant and Child Development, 2012
Young children are frequently exposed to sounds such as speech and music in noisy listening conditions, which have the potential to disrupt their learning. Missing input that is masked by louder sounds can, under the right conditions, be "filled in" by the perceptual system using a process known as perceptual restoration. This experiment…
Descriptors: Young Children, Auditory Discrimination, Acoustics, Cognitive Ability