Hack 60. Pay Attention to Thrown Voices
Sounds from the same spatial location are harder to separate, but not if you use vision to fool your brain into “placing” one of the sounds somewhere else.
Sense information is mixed together in the brain and sorted by location [Hack #54], and we use this organization in choosing what to pay attention to (and therefore tune into). If you’re listening to two different conversations simultaneously, it’s pretty easy if they’re taking place on either side of your headyou can voluntarily tune in to whichever one you want. But let’s say those conversations were occurring in the same place, on the radio: it’s suddenly much harder to make out just one.
Which is why we can talk over each other in a bar and still understand what’s being said, but not on the radio. On the radio, we don’t have any other information to disambiguate who says what and the sounds get confused with each other.
T.S.
Hang on…how do we decide on the spatial location of a sense like hearing? For sound alone, we use clues implicit in what we hear, but if we can see where the sound originates, this visual information dominates [Hack #53] .
Even if it’s incorrect.
Taken from : Mind Hacks
