Be Quiet! Effects of Competing Speakers and Individual Characteristics on Listening Comprehension for Primary School Students
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
Students learn in noisy classrooms, where the main sources of noise are their own voices. In
this sound environment, students are not equally at risk from background noise interference during
lessons, due to the moderation effect of the individual characteristics on the listening conditions.
This study investigates the effect of the number of competing speakers on listening comprehension
and whether this is modulated by selective attention skills, working memory, and noise sensitivity.
Seventy-one primary school students aged 10 to 13 years completed a sentence comprehension
task in three listening conditions: quiet, two competing speakers, and four competing speakers.
Outcome measures were accuracy, listening effort (response times and self-reported), motivation,
and confidence in completing the task. Individual characteristics were assessed in quiet. Results
showed that the number of competing speakers has no direct effects on the task, whilst the individual
characteristics were found to moderate the effect of the listening conditions. Selective attention
moderated the effects on accuracy and response times, working memory on motivation, and noise
sensitivity on both perceived effort and confidence. Students with low cognitive abilities and high
noise sensitivity were found to be particularly at risk in the condition with two competing speakers.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
classroom acoustics; noise; children; listening comprehension; cognitive abilities; noise
sensitivity; attention; working memory
Elenco autori:
Visentin, Chiara; Pellegatti, Matteo; Garraffa, Maria; DI DOMENICO, Alberto; Prodi, Nicola
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