‘Testing the competence of the Stroop test when taken by undergraduate students with pairs of words and colours that are congruous‚ incongruous and semantic.’ ABSTRACT This experiment was conducted using a semantic variation in addition to the original Stroop test to determine the difference in reaction times when applied to congruent‚ incongruent and semantic words and colours. The experiment was conducted with a sample of 20 (17 female‚ 3 male) junior freshman psychology students (Mean age = 19
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Running head: STROOP EFFECT STUDY ON BILINGUALS Comparison of Stroop Effect on Turkish and English Bilinguals and the Effect of Proficiency Level on English In partial fulfilment of the requirements for Statistics and Research Methods 5 June 2008 Abstract People identify the color of a word faster if the word color is congruent with the ink color‚ than if the color is incongruent with the ink color. This is called Stroop Effect. In the present study the aim was to find whether language
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and A.W. Young‚ 1986. Understanding face recognition. British Journal of Psychology‚ 17. Dunbar‚ K. and CM. MacLeod‚ 1984. A horse race of a different color: Stroop interference patterns with transformed words. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 10‚ 622-639. Ellis‚ H.D.‚ 1983. ‘The role of the right hemisphere in face perception’. In: A.W. Young (ed.)‚ Functions of the right
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1 Gareth Stack - Lab Group 2 Date of practical - 20/10/03 / Date of Submission - 07/11/03 Reaction times related to congruence in a Stroop test of undergraduate students 2 ABSTRACT The ’Stroop effect’‚ a measure of interference in a reaction time task‚ was investigated. Twenty undergraduate students of mixed age and gender were each presented with 48 coloured words in turn. These were divided into 16 of each of 3 levels of congruence. The time required to identify the colour of each stimulus
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Revisiting the Stroop Effect: Conditions Affecting Word-Color Response University of California‚ Irvine Contact information Abstract The stroop effect causes interference within people when the color of a word and a word‚ the name of a color‚ are incongruently matched. We tested this phenomenon to see if our results would be held constant as reviewed by existing literature. Our experiment used different conditions which
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Abstract During this investigation‚ we will replicate the study by Stroop (1935) that resulted that our serial verbal reactions are affected by interference. In the investigation‚ 10 participants will be gathered‚ then will be given a paper that contains a list of color names that are written in colors that are congruent of the name of the color‚ they are to read the words out loud. A second paper will be given to them after the first. The second paper will contain a list of words that are again
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The Stroop test‚ on the other hand‚ is a neuropsychological test that measures a person’s attention span in response to both visual and verbal stimulation in order to investigate individual executive functioning and potential cognitive deficits as they relate to conflict resolution and behaviors. Stroop testing is an efficient assessment for identifying appropriate and inappropriate behaviors in a conflict since it evaluates participants on levels of cognitive functioning. For example‚ according
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automatic processes employing the Stroop effect experiment. Abstract The interference between the controlled and the automatic processes was observed in the Stroop effect type experiment using two different conditions. The original Stroop effect experiment concluded that the participants will find it more difficult to complete the reading task of the words related to colour meaning in comparison to the reading task of non-colour related words. The result of Stroop experiment supported the notion
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Errors in Attribution It is human nature for us to think about other people’s actions and intentions and then process what they mean. In this way‚ we form attributions‚ which help us understand others’ purposes and objectives. There are two main types of attributions. The first is dispositional attribution‚ which are assumptions that are made based on someone’s behaviour where a person assumes the behaviour is caused by someone’s personality or character. The second type is a situational attribution
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As a certified Wilderness First Responder‚ I can definitely say that I have seen the Bystander Effect demonstrated first hand. On one specific occasion‚ I was at an outdoor event and woman began having a seizure. Everyone around the lady‚ including both close friends and the security guards for the event‚ stepped back and did nothing‚ seemingly waiting
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