Project

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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">dichotic listening</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">mobile device</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">LCC:B</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">laterality</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">LCC:BF1-990</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">smartphone</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">LCC:Philosophy. Psychology.
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                    Religion</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:result_subject" classid="keyword">language
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                    lateralization</subject>
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                    schemeid="dnet:dataCite_title" classid="main title">“Right on all occasions?” -
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                    on the feasibility of laterality research using a smartphone dichotic listening
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                    application</title>
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                <dateofacceptance>2013-02-01</dateofacceptance>
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                <publisher>Frontiers</publisher>
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                <journal eissn="1664-1078" issn="1664-1078" lissn="">Frontiers in
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                    Psychology</journal>
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                <description>Most psychological experimentation takes place in laboratories aiming
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                    to maximize experimental control; however, this creates artificial environments
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                    that are not representative of real-life situations. Since cognitive processes
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                    usually take place in noisy environments, they should also be tested in these
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                    contexts. The recent advent of smartphone technology provides an ideal medium
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                    for such testing. In order to examine the feasibility of mobile devices in
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                    psychological research in general, and laterality research in particular, we
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                    developed a mobile device (MD) version of the widely used speech laterality
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                    test, the consonant-vowel dichotic listening (DL) paradigm, for use with
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                    iPhones/iPods. First, we evaluated the retest reliability and concurrent
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                    validity of the DL paradigm in its MD version in two samples tested in
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                    controlled, laboratory settings (Experiment 1). Second, we explored its
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                    ecological validity by collecting data from the general population by means of a
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                    free release of the MD version (iDichotic) to the App Store (Experiment 2). The
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                    results of Experiment 1, indicated high reliability (rICC=0.78) and validity
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                    (rICC=0.76 to 0.82) of the MD version which consistently showed the expected
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                    right-ear advantage (REA). When tested in real-life settings (Experiment 2),
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                    participants (N=167) also showed a significant REA. Importantly, the size of the
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                    REA was not dependent on whether the participants chose to listen to the
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                    syllables in their native language or not. Together, these results establish the
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                    current MD version as a valid and reliable method for administering the DL
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                    paradigm both in experimentally controlled as well as uncontrolled settings.
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                    Furthermore, the present findings support the feasibility of using smartphones
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                    in conducting large-scale field experiments. </description>
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                <source>Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 4 (2013)</source>
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                        <acronym>VOICE</acronym>
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                        <title>"Hearing voices" - From cognition to brain systems</title>
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                        <dateofacceptance>2014-01-01</dateofacceptance>
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                        <fullname>René Westerhausen</fullname>
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                        <fullname>Kenneth Hugdahl</fullname>
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                            Occasions?” – On the Feasibility of Laterality Research Using a
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                            Smartphone Dichotic Listening Application</title>
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