about
The Role of Visual Stimuli in Cross-Modal Stroop InterferenceMind wandering in text comprehension under dual-task conditions.Additive factors do not imply discrete processing stages: a worked example using models of the stroop taskImpact of state anxiety on the interaction between threat monitoring and cognitionDoes modulation of selective attention to features reflect enhancement or suppression of neural activity?Reassessing word frequency as a determinant of word recognition for skilled and unskilled readers.Age-related differences in the automatic processing of single letters: implications for selective attention.Attention demands of spoken word planning: a reviewBehavioral and electrophysiological investigation of semantic and response conflict in the Stroop task.Are Automatic Conceptual Cores the Gold Standard of Semantic Processing? The Context-Dependence of Spatial Meaning in Grounded Congruency Effects.Spatial attention modulates feature crosstalk in visual word processing.Even frequent and expected words are not identified without spatial attention.Incidental learning of incongruent items in a manual version of the Stroop task.Impaired color word processing at an unattended location: evidence from a Stroop task combined with inhibition of return.Stroop effects on redemption and semantic effects on confession: simultaneous automatic activation of embedded and carrier words.Divided attention modulates semantic activation: evidence from a nonletter-level prime task.Congruency effects in the letter search task: semantic activation in the absence of priming.An examination of semantic radical combinability effects with lateralized cues in Chinese character recognition.When the visual format of the color carrier word does and does not modulate the stroop effect.Individual differences in verbal-spatial conflict in rapid spatial-orientation tasks.Seeing the same words differently: the time course of automaticity and top-down intention in reading.Unintentional and efficient relational priming.Automaticity revisited: when print doesn't activate semantics.Single letter coloring and spatial cuing eliminates a semantic contribution to the Stroop effect.Coloring only a single letter does not eliminate color-word interference in a vocal-response Stroop task: automaticity revealed.Using the speeded word fragment completion task to examine semantic priming.Unconsciously controlled processing: the Stroop effect reconsidered.The locus and nature of semantic congruity in symbolic comparison: evidence from the Stroop effect.Semantic processing in visual word recognition: activation blocking and domain specificity.The myth of ballistic processing: evidence from Stroop's paradigm.Stroop interference is affected in inhibition of return.Stroop interference in a delayed match-to-sample task: evidence for semantic competition.Modulating semantic feedback in visual word recognition.Semantic priming in the prime task effect: evidence of automatic semantic processing of distractors.Suggestion does not de-automatize word reading: evidence from the semantically based Stroop task.Likelihood of attending to the color word modulates Stroop interference.Single-letter coloring and spatial cuing do not eliminate or reduce a semantic contribution to the Stroop effect.Viewing-position effects in the Stroop task: Initial fixation position modulates Stroop effects in fully colored words.Cognitive control predicts use of model-based reinforcement learning.Biologically constrained action selection improves cognitive control in a model of the Stroop task.
P2860
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P2860
description
1997 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1997年の論文
@ja
1997年論文
@yue
1997年論文
@zh-hant
1997年論文
@zh-hk
1997年論文
@zh-mo
1997年論文
@zh-tw
1997年论文
@wuu
1997年论文
@zh
1997年论文
@zh-cn
name
The stroop effect and the myth of automaticity.
@en
type
label
The stroop effect and the myth of automaticity.
@en
prefLabel
The stroop effect and the myth of automaticity.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
The stroop effect and the myth of automaticity.
@en
P2093
P2860
P2888
P304
P356
10.3758/BF03209396
P577
1997-06-01T00:00:00Z
P5875
P6179
1011151752