Journal ArticleDOI
The stroop color-word test: A review
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This article is published in Acta Psychologica.The article was published on 1966-01-01. It has received 848 citations till now.read more
Citations
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Controlled and automatic human information processing: II. Perceptual learning, automatic attending and a general theory.
TL;DR: Tested the 2-process theory of detection, search, and attention presented by the current authors (1977) in a series of experiments and demonstrated the qualitative difference between 2 modes of information processing: automatic detection and controlled search.
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Half a century of research on the Stroop effect: an integrative review.
TL;DR: It is concluded that recent theories placing the explanatory weight on parallel processing of the irrelevant and the relevant dimensions are likely to be more sucessful than are earlier theories attempting to locate a single bottleneck in attention.
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Dimensional overlap: cognitive basis for stimulus-response compatibility--a model and taxonomy.
TL;DR: The model provides a systematic account of SRC effects, a taxonomy of simple performance tasks that were hitherto thought to be unrelated, and suggestive parallels between these tasks and the experimental paradigms that have traditionally been used to study attentional, controlled, and automatic processes.
References
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Comparisons of white and negro children in certain ingenuity and speed tests.
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The influence of alcohol
TL;DR: The present study inquires not only into the effects of alcohol, but, into those effects when produced by the consumption in various amounts of a beverage of known alcoholic content, and makes a supplementary contribution to the recent and more elaborate investigations of the effect of alcohol in general.
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The effects of methamphetamine and pentobarbital on two measures of attention.
TL;DR: The results suggest that barbiturate does interfere with the capacity of the human subject to attend maximally as measured by the running digit span test, but the effects of methamphetamine on this function and the effectsof both drugs on the focus of attention could not be demonstrated by the method employed.