"Stroop effect" Essays and Research Papers

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    Stroop Effect CogLab Report Stroop Effect CogLab Report The Stroop effect is a test that demonstrates a decrease in reaction time that occurs when the brain receives conflicting information. When sensory information conflicts‚ a processing delay occurs in the brain; this is interference. If a specific color is paired with its corresponding word then those two pieces of information are compatible. If the information conflicts then the individual is forced to make a decision. It is hypothesized

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    Stroop Test Report

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    RSAMI – GROUP II ‘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

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    The investigation into the effect of social facilitation on the performance level within the Stroop effect. Abstract The relationship between social facilitation (first discovered by Triplett in 1898) and the issue of interference within the Stroop effect were investigated. Fifty participants were recruited and took part in a repeated measures design. Participants were given a list of congruent and incongruent words in single and paired situations. The overall findings of this study suggest

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    Introduction Effects of Interference on Visual and Verbal Associations The discovery of The Stroop Effect by J.Ridley Stroop in the 1930’s has gave birth to many new theories to how the brain works. The Stroop Effect by psychology terms is the demonstration of reaction time while performing a task. The findings of The Stroop Effect demonstrate how difficult it can be to only concentrate at one thing. J. Ridley Stroop conducted two experiments himself. In the first experiment‚ he compared time

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    The Stroop Task Test

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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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    Stroop Color Word Test

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    differences in gender performance among male and females and age on the Stroop interference effect. Experimental psychology students of eight respondents‚ 3 males and 5 females‚ completed the task in which they participated in a Stroop Colour-Word Test. The condition is the ability to recognize the colours‚ the performance difference between male and female‚ the performance difference between age‚ the reaction time and the effect of colour word interference in order for the participants to speak out

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    Stroop Test Lab Report

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    After distributing the Stroop Task‚ the following results were discovered: the mean for the musicians was 1178.7070 milliseconds and the total mean for the athletes was 1235.188 milliseconds. Our results was the following‚ t(18)=0.587; p=0.567. The results as demonstrated can clearly state that there was not a significance within the .05 alpha level. Therefore‚ the null hypothesis had to be retained. Our conclusion of the Stroop Task was that the musicians did not show a faster (lower) time in comparison

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    Stroop was interested in the effects of interference and he tested it using colors‚ blocks and symbols to do this. Stroop used names of colors printed in incongruent ink‚ the same color ink‚ and in black ink to see if there was an effect that could show interference. He wanted to know how interference could be effected by stimuli like color and symbols. By looking at other research that was done before he dove into his studies on interference‚ he was able to gain insight on the subject. One of them

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    The Effect of the Method of Sorting on Response Time Sreeja Mani Professor Jeffery Hamelin Psychology 213 W 9/24/2010 The Effect of the Method of Sorting on Response Time The purpose of this study is to see whether response time changes when the card sorting condition is manipulated. The more complex the condition is when sorting cards‚ the higher the response time and vice versa. Method Participant and Setting Twenty female college students from Queens College experimental psychology

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