Effects of Presentation Side and Emotional Valence on Auditory Recognition in Younger and Older Adults

被引:0
作者
Prete, Giulia [1 ]
Malatesta, Gianluca [1 ]
D'Anselmo, Anita [1 ,2 ]
Palumbo, Rocco [1 ]
Ceccato, Irene [1 ]
La Malva, Pasquale [1 ]
Di Crosta, Adolfo [1 ]
Mammarella, Nicola [1 ]
Tommasi, Luca [1 ]
Di Domenico, Alberto [1 ]
机构
[1] G Annunzio Univ Chieti & Pescara, Dept Psychol, I-66100 Chieti, Italy
[2] G D Annunzio Univ Chieti & Pescara, Dept Med & Aging Sci, I-66100 Chieti, Italy
来源
SYMMETRY-BASEL | 2024年 / 16卷 / 07期
关键词
hemispheric asymmetries; right ear advantage (REA); age; auditory recognition; positivity effect; RIGHT-EAR ADVANTAGE; RIGHT-HEMISPHERE DECLINE; COGNITIVE CONTROL; PERCEPTION; ASYMMETRY; LATERALIZATION; MEMORY; HALLUCINATIONS; STIMULI; HEARING;
D O I
10.3390/sym16070835
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
(1) Background: It is well-established that older persons compared with younger persons show a bias toward positive valence (a positivity effect), together with less pronounced hemispheric asymmetries, but these topics have been scarcely explored in auditory modality. (2) Methods: We presented auditory stimuli with positive, neutral, or negative emotional valence dichotically to 20 younger and 20 older participants and asked them to memorize the stimuli. In a following session, stimuli were presented binaurally, and participants had to decide whether they were new or already presented in the left/right ear. (3) Results: A higher performance by younger compared with older listeners emerged, but neither the expected Right Ear Advantage nor the positivity effect was confirmed. New stimuli were correctly categorized more frequently if they had neutral valence, whereas stimuli already presented were better recognized with negative rather than neutral or positive valence, without any age difference. (4) Conclusions: These results reveal no hemispheric asymmetries and no age difference in a memory task for auditory stimuli and suggest the existence of a bias to better encode negative content, possibly due to the crucial role of negative stimuli in everyday life.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 79 条
[1]   Hemispheric perception of emotional valence from facial expressions [J].
Adolphs, R ;
Jansari, A ;
Tranel, D .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 15 (04) :516-524
[2]   Do patients with hallucinations imagine speech right? [J].
Altamura, Mario ;
Prete, Giulia ;
Elia, Antonella ;
Angelini, Eleonora ;
Padalino, Flavia A. ;
Bellomo, Antonello ;
Tommasi, Luca ;
Fairfield, Beth .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2020, 146
[3]   Patterns of brain asymmetry in the perception of positive and negative facial expressions [J].
Alves, N. T. ;
Aznar-Casanova, J. A. ;
Fukusima, S. S. .
LATERALITY, 2009, 14 (03) :256-272
[4]  
[Anonymous], 1967, Cortex, DOI DOI 10.1016/S0010-9452(67)80010-8
[5]   Auditory-Induced Negative Emotions Increase Recognition Accuracy for Visual Scenes Under Conditions of High Visual Interference [J].
Baumann, Oliver .
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2018, 9
[6]   The relation of planum temporale asymmetry and morphology of the corpus callosum to handedness, gender, and dyslexia: A review of the evidence [J].
Beaton, AA .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1997, 60 (02) :255-322
[7]   Right-ear advantage drives the link between olivocochlear efferent 'antimasking' and speech-in-noise listening benefits [J].
Bidelman, Gavin M. ;
Bhagat, Shaum P. .
NEUROREPORT, 2015, 26 (08) :483-487
[8]   Laterality effects in the processing of melody and timbre [J].
Boucher, R ;
Bryden, MP .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 1997, 35 (11) :1467-1473
[9]   Effects of attention on dichotic listening in elderly and patients with dementia of the Alzheimer type [J].
Bouma, Anke ;
Gootjes, Liselotte .
BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2011, 76 (02) :286-293
[10]  
Bradley M. M., 2007, Bradley, M. M. , Lang, P. J. (2007). The International Affective Digitized Sounds (IADS-2): Affective ratings of sounds and instruction manual (Tech. Rep. B-3). Gainesville, FL: University of Florida.