Wednesday, April 29, 2020
The Stroop Phenomenon Essays - Neuropsychology, Perception
  The Stroop Phenomenon                   Introduction       The stroop phenomenon is a way of measuring how automatic or  intentional some well practised tasks are and how we respond in conflict  situations. This phenomenon also measures individual distinctions,  originality and cognitive flexibility. The two aspects of cognitive  development that are demonstrated by the stroop task are naming response  and counting response. When two responses compete or are in conflict, the  time required to make the correct decision is dependent on speed and  accuracy.       In the article "Tracing The Time Course of Picture Word Processing",  by M.C. Smith and L.E. Magee; these two researchers found that picture  naming was affected by the presence of incongruent words (Experiment 1).  Also naming a picture was faster than when a congruent word was present.  Therefore pictures activate the name code. Another experiment (Experiment  2) indicated that memory for pictures and words, whether they were  initially named or categorized had an effect on memory. Memory was better  for words if they have been categorized and for pictures if they have been  named. Experiment 3 showed the same results as the previous two  experiments. The fourth experiment, with the introduction of less common  objects, subjects could name the words faster than generating a category  name for the words. Naming pictures are prone to interference when  incongruent words are presented simultaneously. Word naming is not as much  influenced by distracting pictures. Pictures and words differ in the  amount of information to be filtered out, to get the correct response.       The design of this experiment is a within subject experiment as the  number of choices to be made after viewing the stimulus on the screen are  same for everybody (2,3,4). Also the meaning versus number choices (same,  different, conflicting) are used by everyone. The dependent variables in  this experiment are average accuracy (%) and average time/response (msec).  the independent variable is the random stimulus which appeared on the  screen, whether it was the same, different or conflicting. In this  experiment we were shown 2, 3, or 4 items on the screen in a randomized  form and had to select the right number of items using 2,3,4 on the  keyboard as quickly and accurately as possible.       In this experiment, the stroop task will be demonstrated. When there  is no conflict between the stimulus and response to be chosen, responses  will be quick and accurate. When there is a conflict between the stimulus  and response to be made, interference will exist and responding will be  slower and less accurate.               Results & Discussion Figure 1         The average accuracy in percent for subject 1, was good for the 'same'  condition. Then they started to decrease when the stimulus was  'different'. This score for subject 1 at the 'different' condition was the  lowest among all 3 conditions. When the stimulus was 'conflicting', subject  1 was losing accuracy again and so was not as high as in the 'same'  condition. Subject 1 was less accurate in the 'different' and  'conflicting' situations.       The average accuracy in percent for subject 2, was quite consistent,  being one hundred percent in all conditions. So this subject had a higher  accuracy rate than subject 1. Figure 2       In relation to average time/response in milliseconds, subject 1 was  quicker than subject 2. Then condition where subject 1 slowed down the  most was in the 'different' condition. In the 'conflicting' condition,  subject 1 increased their speed more than in any other condition.       Subject 2 was quite consistent in all 3 conditions in relation to  average time/response, with the milliseconds being only 3 or 4 different  from the other conditions. For subject 2 the highest responding rate was  in the 'conflicting' condition, followed by 'same', then the 'different'  condition.       This shows that in the 'conflicting' condition, the subjects response  rate increased. In the 'different' condition the response decreased. Also  if one subject has a higher accuracy rate than another subject, then the  average time/response will be lower.       The stroop task demonstrates that the naming response (same) is faster  than the response used while counting (different) and that when 2 responses  conflict (conflicting), the time to make a correct decision increases.       Since people find the 'conflict' condition difficult, they will make  more errors and take more time to determine the correct response. So the  accuracy and response rate decreases in the 'conflict' situation.       The difference in speed and accuracy in the 3 conditions (same,  different, and conflicting) was the result of the experience with each  specific condition. The more practice with each condition, the smaller the  differences in speed and accuracy among the three conditions.       When there    
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