1. Effects of different amounts of brief training and rest on the generalization of learning from interaural‐level‐difference to interaural‐time‐difference discrimination
- Author
-
Jeanette A. Ortiz and Beverly A. Wright
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Acoustics and Ultrasonics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Training (meteorology) ,Interaural time difference ,Audiology ,Affect (psychology) ,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) ,Perceptual learning ,Rest (finance) ,Generalization (learning) ,medicine ,Contrast (vision) ,Psychology ,media_common - Abstract
Training‐induced improvements on perceptual skills can be enhanced by increasing the amount of training and by resting between training and testing. However, how these two factors affect the generalization of learning from a briefly trained condition to an untrained one is unknown. Here, listeners were trained on an interaural‐level‐difference (ILD) discrimination condition (4‐kHz tones), then were tested for generalization to an interaural‐time‐difference (ITD) discrimination condition (0.5‐kHz tones). The amount of training and the time between training and testing differed across four groups. Listeners tested 10 hours after training had significantly lower ITD discrimination thresholds than naive listeners (n=94), regardless of whether training lasted for 20 min (n=14) or 2 hs (n=11). Thus, when there was a long time between training and testing, learning generalized from ILD to ITD discrimination regardless of the amount of training. In contrast, listeners tested immediately after training on ILD disc...
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF