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Cocktail Party Effect

Also known as: Selective Auditory Attention

The human ability to focus auditory attention on a single speaker or sound source while filtering out competing background noise or other simultaneous conversations. Named after the experience of following one conversation at a noisy party, this perceptual phenomenon has been leveraged in accessibility research to support reading for blind users by presenting different text sections as concurrent speech channels, allowing users to selectively attend to the most relevant content and skim information more efficiently than through sequential audio.

Category: Cognitive Accessibility · Assistive Technology

Related: Concurrent Speech · Non-Visual Reading · Skimming Interface

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