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  2. Stroop effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stroop_effect

    Another variant of the classic Stroop effect is the reverse Stroop effect. It occurs during a pointing task. In a reverse Stroop task, individuals are shown a page with a black square with an incongruent colored word in the middle—for instance, the word "red" written in the color green (red)—with four smaller colored squares in the corners ...

  3. Emotional Stroop test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_Stroop_test

    Both the classic and the emotional Stroop tasks involve the need to suppress responses to distracting word information, while selectively maintaining attention on the color of the word to complete the task. However, the emotional Stroop task has been used broadly in clinical studies using emotional words related to a particular individual's ...

  4. Eriksen flanker task - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eriksen_flanker_task

    All three of these tasks have mainly been viewed as identical in terms of the control processes that are involved. Due to this, inferences and predictions about one task have been made by theorists based on the published findings in a different task. Another conflict task that receives significant focus is the Stroop task. In this test ...

  5. Numerical Stroop effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Numerical_Stroop_effect

    The numerical Stroop effect, a concept rooted in cognitive psychology, refers to the interference that occurs when individuals are asked to compare numerical values or physical sizes of digits presented together. The effect arises when there is a mismatch—or incongruity—between the numerical value and the physical size of the digits.

  6. 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.

  7. Executive functions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Executive_functions

    The cognitive task used in the article is selecting a response in the Stroop task, among conflicting color and word responses, specifically a stimulus where the word "green" is printed in red ink. The posterior DLPFC creates an appropriate attentional set, or rules for the brain to accomplish the current goal.

  8. Mental chronometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_chronometry

    The task involving the most cognitive processes was the rule match task in which subjects had to determine whether the two letters presented both were vowels or not vowels. The physical match task was the most simple; subjects had to encode the letters, compare them to each other, and make a decision.

  9. Attentional bias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attentional_Bias

    Stroop paradigm The Stroop paradigm was the first measure of attentional bias. [4] It also uses reaction time, only in this case utilizing colors. The subject would have to read the color of the word (e.g. brown), however, the name of the word would be a different color (e.g. red).