Publication | Closed Access
Temporal Resolution in Children
154
Citations
22
References
1989
Year
PsychoacousticsLanguage DevelopmentCognitionTemporal ResolutionSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentDevelopmental DisorderHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingChild PsychologyCognitive ScienceAudiologyHuman HearingGap ThresholdExperimental PsychologyGlobal Developmental DelayChild DevelopmentHearing LossGap ThresholdsYoung ChildrenSpeech PerceptionTime Perception
The auditory temporal resolving power of young children was measured using an adaptive forced-choice psychophysical paradigm that was disguised as a video game. 20 children between 3 and 7 years of age and 5 adults were asked to detect the presence of a temporal gap in a burst of half-octave-band noise at band center frequencies of 400 and 2,000 Hz. The minimum detectable gap (gap threshold) was estimated adaptively in 20-trial runs. The mean gap thresholds in the 400-Hz condition were higher for the younger children than for the adults, with the 3-year-old children producing the highest thresholds. Gap thresholds in the 2,000-Hz condition were generally lower than in the 400-Hz condition and showed a similar age effect. All the individual adaptive runs were "adult-like," suggesting that the children were generally attentive to the task during each run. However, the variability of threshold estimates from run to run was substantial, especially in the 3-5-year-old children. Computer simulations suggested that this large within-subjects variability could have resulted from frequent, momentary lapses of attention, which would lead to "guessing" on a substantial portion of the trials.
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