The effects of auditory spatial attention on event-related
brain potentials (ERPs) were examined in situations that promoted
stream segregation. Short and long noise bursts were presented
at three azimuth locations and listeners were asked to respond
to the longer sounds occurring at either the right- or left-most
location. In the baseline condition, the three sound sources
were evenly spaced apart. In the distractor clustering conditions,
middle and far sounds were clustered. In the attended clustering
conditions, middle and attended sounds were clustered. ERP indices
of attention, isolated as negative difference (Nd) waves, were
greater over the hemisphere contralateral to the attended location.
Nd waves were also larger when the middle sounds were moved
toward the far distractors, consistent with an object-based
gradient of auditory attention in which higher order information
provided by the perceptual context influences selective processing.