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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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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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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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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The Stroop Effect: Automatic and controlled processes and the time taken to identify colours and words Abstract The aim of the experiment was test whether automatic processing could affect a colour related task. Previous research has found that the response time of reading the colour of the ink of colour associated words was greater than reading the colour of the ink of neutral words. The experiment retested the Stroop effect to measure the incursion of automatic processing. The results showed
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Jun Okubo September 28‚ 2012 IBH Psychology Mr. Altmann Introduction In the 1930s‚ J. Ridley Stroop discovered a strange phenomenon. He asked his participants to name the colors of the words. In first trial‚ the color and the words matched. However‚ in the second trial‚ the colors and the words did not match. He found out that when the color and the words did not match‚ it took longer to name all the colors. There are several theories as to why there is a huge delay. The first theory is
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Anna Braim TMA03 A8807858 The effect automatic processing has in decision making that is underneath the conscious; using colour identification task from the Stroop effect. Abstract The experiment is using 20 participants and is employing a within-participant design. The experiment will consist of two condition‚ one that is consistent with the Stoop effect‚ using colour related words‚ and condition 2 consisting of neutral coloured words. The experiment will indicate whether the participant’s response
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The Effects of Disrupted Visual Fields on Perception: Perception Adaptation Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of requirements for Psychology 1100E Abstract Kornheiser and Stratton are responsible for much of the modern day understanding of perception and adaptation. The purpose of this experiment was to examine the affects of sensory changes on perception adaptation. In this particular experiment‚ 105 Huron University College students completed a simple task
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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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Results and discussion INTRODUCTION The Stroop effect is a classic cognitive psychology experiment discovered and first studied by J. Ridley Stroop in 1935.It originated from the theory of automatic processes. It is clear that some processing activities become automatic as a result of prolonged practice e.g. Typing‚ driving‚ etc. Automatic processes therefore are fast‚ require no attention and are unavoidable. Stroop believed that there was some evidence that word identification may be a form
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