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1.
J Exp Psychol Gen ; 118(1): 13-42, 1989 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2522504

RESUMO

Presents a series of 6 experiments in which Stroop-like effects were generated by modally pure color-color, picture-picture, and word-word stimuli instead of the usual modally mixed color-word or picture-word stimuli. Naming, reading, and categorization tasks were applied. The Stroop inhibition was preserved with these stimuli but unexpectedly showed a semantic gradient only in the naming and not in the reading task. Word categorizing was slower and more interference prone than picture categorizing. These and other results can be captured by a model with two main assumptions: (a) semantic memory and the lexicon are separate, and (b) words have privileged access to the lexicon, whereas pictures and colors have privileged access to the semantic network. Such a model is developed and put to an initial test.


Assuntos
Atenção , Percepção de Forma , Reconhecimento Visual de Modelos , Leitura , Semântica , Adulto , Percepção de Cores , Aprendizagem por Discriminação , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Tempo de Reação
2.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform ; 8(6): 875-94, 1982 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6218237

RESUMO

Dyer (1971) investigated the response competition hypothesis of the Stroop phenomenon by temporally separating the color and word components of single stimuli (incongruent, control, and congruent). This line of research was continued in a series of five experiments that generalized Dyer's study: (a) In addition to the color-naming task, a reading task was included; (b) the irrelevant stimulus component was presented before and after the relevant one; (c) the probabilities of congruent and incongruent stimuli were varied; (d) besides color-word/color stimuli, color-color and word-word stimuli were used; and (e) the functional discrimination (color naming or reading) was compared with a sequential discrimination task. The data suggest the following temporal relations: (a) a slow facilitation due to response bias; (b) its inhibitory counterpart; and (c) a fast, strong inhibition with no facilitatory complement that seems to correspond to the usual Stroop conflict but that seems to occur earlier than the response execution stage.


Assuntos
Percepção de Cores , Aprendizagem por Discriminação , Percepção de Forma , Reconhecimento Visual de Modelos , Semântica , Adulto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Tempo de Reação , Leitura
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