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  2. Stroop effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroop_effect

    The effect is named after John Ridley Stroop, who first published the effect in English in 1935. [2] The effect had previously been published in Germany in 1929 by other authors. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] The original paper by Stroop has been one of the most cited papers in the history of experimental psychology , leading to more than 700 Stroop ...

  3. Avishai Henik - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avishai_Henik

    His early works focused on single word processing and the Stroop effect and later on visual spatial attention, numerical cognition, dyscalculia, emotions, and synesthesia. He has written over 200 articles, in addition to an edited book entitled, Continuous Issues in Numerical Cognition: How Many or How Much. [3]

  4. Parallel processing (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_processing...

    Parallel processing has been linked, by some experimental psychologists, to the stroop effect (resulting from the stroop test where there is a mismatch between the name of a color and the color that the word is written in). [5] In the stroop effect, an inability to attend to all stimuli is seen through people's selective attention. [6]

  5. John Ridley Stroop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Ridley_Stroop

    John Ridley Stroop (/ s t r uː p /; March 21, 1897 – September 1, 1973), better known as J. Ridley Stroop, was an American psychologist whose research in cognition and interference continues to be considered by some as the gold standard in attentional studies and profound enough to continue to be cited for relevance into the 21st century.

  6. Emotional Stroop test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_Stroop_test

    Thus, the emotional Stroop does not involve an effect of conflict between a word meaning and a color of text, but rather appears to capture attention and slow response time due to the emotional relevance of the word for the individual. Both the standard Stroop effect and the emotional Stoop task have high test-retest reliability. [7] [8]

  7. List of effects - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_effects

    Stroop effect (perception) (psychological tests) Steric effect (chemical kinetics) (chemical reactions) (collision theory) (molecular geometry) (stereochemistry) Subadditivity effect (cognitive biases) Subject-expectancy effect (cognitive biases) Sunyaev–Zel'dovich effect (physical cosmology) (radio astronomy)

  8. Anterior cingulate cortex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anterior_cingulate_cortex

    Another version of the Stroop task named the Emotional Counting Stroop is identical to the Counting Stroop test, except that it also uses segmented or repeated emotional words such as "murder" during the interference part of the task. Thus, ACC affects decision making of a task.

  9. Negative priming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negative_priming

    The Stroop color–word task utilizes the Stroop effect to observe the distractor suppression and negative priming. Identification tasks present a set of images, sounds, words, symbols, or letters and require the subject to select the prime target based a particular feature that differentiates the target from the distractor.

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