How Selective Hearing Works in the Brain: “Cocktail Party Effect” Explained, University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Study

The longstanding mystery of how selective hearing works -- how people can tune in to a single speaker while tuning out their crowded, noisy environs -- is solved this week in the journal Nature by two scientists from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF). Psychologists have known for decades about the so-called “cocktail party effect,” a name that evokes the Mad Men era in which it was coined. It is the remarkable human ability to focus on a single speaker in virtually any environment -- a classroom, sporting event or coffee bar -- even if that person’s voice is seemingly drowned out by a jabbering crowd.

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