ברוכים הבאים! בלוג זה נועד לספק משאבים לפסיכולוגים חינוכיים ואחרים בנושאים הקשורים לדיאגנוסטיקה באורייטנצית CHC אבל לא רק.

בבלוג יוצגו מאמרים נבחרים וכן מצגות שלי וחומרים נוספים.

אם אתם חדשים כאן, אני ממליצה לכם לעיין בסדרת המצגות המופיעה בטור הימני, שכותרתה "משכל ויכולות קוגניטיביות".

Welcome! This blog is intended to provide assessment resources for Educational and other psychologists.

The material is CHC - oriented , but not entirely so.

The blog features selected papers, presentations made by me and other materials.

If you're new here, I suggest reading the presentation series in the right hand column – "intelligence and cognitive abilities".

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Sunday, June 15, 2014

The effect of auditory processing on serial and temporal processing in other modalities


  

While working on part 8 of the nine part series of presentations about intelligence and cognitive abilities (which will be about auditory processing), I read the following paper which is both easy to read and important (in my view) because it 
connects things that psychologists are not used to connect.

Conway, C.M., Pisoni, D.B. and Kronenberger, W.G.  The Importance of Sound for Cognitive Sequencing 
Abilities: The Auditory Scaffolding Hypothesis. Curr Dir Psychol Sci. Oct 2009; 18(5): 275–279.


Main points from the article:

·         Sounds are signals which have a serial and a temporal dimension.  The sequence of sounds in an auditory message (music, oral language) is important.
·         In childhood, we learn to process and interpret all kinds of sequential information by listening to sequences of sounds.  
·         People perform best at tasks requiring perception, learning or memory of stimuli for which sequence, order and timing are important – when the tasks are auditory (not visual or tactile).  For instance, people are better able to repeat sequences of sounds than sequences of light flashes.  People are better able to repeat a series of words they listened to than a series of word they read (non-vocally).
·         Congenitally deaf people perform worse than control groups on non auditory tasks requiring temporal sequencing – for example immediately repeating a series of colors and/or locations.

·         Delay in the acquisition of sequential skills disrupts the ability to acquire grammar.

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