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Central auditory processing : III. The “cocktail party” effect and anterior temporal lobectomy
Authors:R. Efron   P. H. Crandall  B. Koss   P. L. Divenyi   E. W. Yund  
Affiliation:1. Veterans Administration Medical Center, Martinez, USA;2. University of California School of Medicine, Davis, USA;3. Veterans Administration Medical Center, Martinez, USA;4. University of California School of Medicine, Davis, USA
Abstract:The capacity to selectively attend to only one of multiple, spatially separated, simultaneous sound sources—the “cocktail party” effect—was evaluated in normal subjects and in those with anterior temporal lobectomy using common environmental sounds. A significant deficit in this capacity was observed for those stimuli located on the side of space contralateral to the lobectomy, a finding consistent with the hypothesis that within each anterior temporal lobe is a mechanism that is normally capable of enhancing the perceptual salience of one acoustic stimulus on the opposite side of space, when other sound sources are present on that side. Damage to this mechanism also appears to be associated with a deficit of spatial localization for sounds contralateral to the lesion.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Dr. Robert Efron   ACOS/R&D Neurophysiology/Biophysics Research Laboratory   VA Medical Center   150 Muir Road   Martinez   CA 94553.
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