scispace - formally typeset
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
Reads0
Chats0
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,

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Modularity beyond perception: evidence from single task interference paradigms.

TL;DR: The Dimension-Action (DA) model with translational models is combined to account for both the Stroop and the flanker effects and it is shown that words denoting colors can affect print colors only when they are required for naming or when participants verbally mediate the print color task.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of stress on Stroop color-word performance

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of stress on the Stroop Color-Word Test were investigated in 48 college students, under the expectation that stress would effect performance differentially, depending upon the nature of the incongruous stimuli.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of auditory presentation of words on color naming: the intermodal Stroop effect.

TL;DR: The findings indicate that without the presentation of color and word component in the same spatial location the Stroop effect occurs, suggesting that the feature-integration theory cannot explain the mechanisms underlying the Stroip effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlling Intentions The Surprising Ease of Stopping After Going Relative to Stopping After Never Having Gone

TL;DR: Although repeatedly performing an intention strengthens target-action links, it appears to enable deactivation of the intention, a process that is largely target specific (Experiment 3).
Journal ArticleDOI

Word comprehension and naming: an analysis of English and Japanese orthographies

TL;DR: A Japanese version of the Stroop test was used to study interference effects produced by conflicting color words written in Kanji, a logographic orthography, and in Kana, a phonetic orthography.
Related Papers (5)