过分专注眼前事物,会让你短暂失聪?Research found that the 13 volunteers experienced 'inattentional deafness' to
the normal-volume sounds playing in the background as their visual tasks became
increasingly difficult.
'We found that when volunteers were performing the demanding visual task,
they were unable to hear sounds that they would normally hear,' study co-author
Maria Chait said in a statement.
'The brain scans showed that people were not only ignoring or filtering out
the sounds, they were not actually hearing them in the first place. '
The findings, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, suggest that the
visual and auditory processing centers that make sense of the sights and sounds
that surround us share limited resources.
Inattentional deafness is a common every day experience and the study
explains why, according to UCL Institute of Cognitive2 Neuroscience Professor
Nilli Lavie, a co-author of the study.
'If you try to talk to someone focusing on a book, game, or television
program and don't receive a response, they aren't necessarily ignoring you, they
simply might not hear you! ' she said.
'This could also explain why you might not hear your bus or train stop being
announced if you're concentrating on your phone, book, or newspaper. '