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Journal ArticleDOI

Semantic power measured through the interference of words with color-naming.

George Stuart Klein
- 01 Dec 1964 - 
- Vol. 77, Iss: 4, pp 576-588
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TLDR
The sources of the word's power to interfere with color-naming and the events involved in the interference itself have not received much attention.
Abstract
Show the words 'red,' 'green,' 'yellow,' and 'blue,' printed in colored inks but in incongruent combinations of color and word, e.g. the word 'red' printed in the color yellow, the word 'yellow' in the color blue, and so on. The Ss are to name the colors (of the inks) as quickly as possible, ignoring the words. It is not easy to do. Invariably, the colors are harder to name than when they are shown in simple strips uncomplicated by words. The phenomenon was noticed by Jaensch, and was first reported in this country by Stroop.1 To say that the word interferes with the naming of the color is a fair reflection of the S's experience. Volume of voice goes up; reading falters; now and then the words break through abortively; and there are embarrassed giggles. These and other signs of strain and effort are common. The sources of the word's power to interfere with color-naming and the events involved in the interference itself have not received much attention,

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Amygdala functional connectivity predicts pharmacotherapy outcome in pediatric bipolar disorder.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that increased functional integration of the amygdala within the frontolimbic network might be a biomarker of general mood stabilizer medication responsivity in bipolar disorder.
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When Convergent Thought Improves Performance: Majority Versus Minority Influence

TL;DR: This paper showed that exposure to minority views is conducive to improved performance, by means of a task on which convergent thought enhances performance-the Stroop test, where shown names of colors printed in inks of other colors, subjects have difficulty ignoring the printed color name.
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Effects of taboo words on color-naming performance on a stroop test '

TL;DR: The effect of irrelevant taboo and control words on performance on the Stroop task was examined and internal consistency for interference of taboo words was estimated, which was acceptable.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of preference expression modality on self-control

TL;DR: This article found that speaking is less likely than motor movement to evoke self-control and that different expression modalities activate different regions of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), and hence may influence the extent to which emotions rather than cognitions determine an individual's decision.
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