1 / 13

The stroop studies

The stroop studies. Controlled Vs automatic processing. Experiment one . CONTROL CONDITION Time taken to read colour words printed in black ink Eg . black, red, blue, green EXPERIMENTAL CONDITION Time taken to identify the colour of the ink the words are printed in

kermit
Download Presentation

The stroop studies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The stroop studies Controlled Vs automatic processing

  2. Experiment one CONTROL CONDITION • Time taken to read colour words printed in black ink • Eg. black, red, blue, green EXPERIMENTAL CONDITION • Time taken to identify the colour of the ink the words are printed in • Eg. Red, green, blue, purple

  3. Experiment one – variables & hypothesis • IV – colour of ink used to print word (congruent or incongruent) • DV – time taken to name the colour of the ink • Hypothesis – that participants would take longer to identify the ink colour (incongruent list) than to read the black word list

  4. Experiment two CONTROL CONDITION • Time taken to identify colour blocks • Eg. EXPERIMENTAL CONDITION • Time taken to identify the colour of the ink the words are printed in • Eg. Red, green, blue, purple

  5. Experiment two – variables & hypothesis • IV – colour of ink used to print word (inconcruent) or block • DV – time taken to identify the colour of the ink used to print the blocks or words • Hypothesis – that participants would take longer to identify the colour of ink used to print incongruent words as compared to blocks of colour

  6. Experiment three • Participants attempted each of the 4 previously listed conditions with one exception • Instead of colour blocks Stroop used symbols, in this conditions participants were to name the ink colour • Eg.

  7. Results and conclusions • In all experiments participants took significantly longer to name an incongruent colour (conflicting task) than identify colour under any other condition • It seems that reading is an automatic response • To name the ink colour is a controlled process • Automatic processing takes precedence over controlled processing, we cant stop it even if we want to • Naming the ink colour requires attention and cognitive effort • Our automatic response to read interferes with our ability to name the colour of the ink

  8. Research design • All 3 experiments used separate samples of participants • All 3 experiments used a repeated measures design where all participants did both conditions • All 3 experiments used counter balancing

  9. Experimental Vs Control Groups Experimental Groups • Participants are exposed to the experimental condition (i.e. The IV is present – identify ink in incongruent words) Control Group • Participants who are exposed to the control condition (i.e. the IV is absent- read words in black ink) •  We compare the experimental group to the control group

  10. Extraneous Variables Extraneous Variables – can effect DV • A random variable other than the independent variable that can cause change in the dependent variable and therefore effect the results of an experiment • e.g. Differences among participants - personal characteristics, ability, temperament, motivation etc. • When the effects of an extraneous/uncontrolled variable are confused, or confounded with those of the independent variable, then the extraneous variable has become a confounding variable • What else could effect naming of ink colour and reading other than the incongruence? – Eye Sight, colour blindness, literacy

  11. Repeated Measures Design Repeated Measures Design • Each participant is involved in both the experimental and control conditions • This design controls or eliminates any effects that might be attributed to participant's personal characteristics, since they remain constant • Also known as the within participants design • Can suffer from the Order Effect - effect of practice and fatigue • Counterbalancing can help this

  12. Repeated Measures Design

  13. Research designs – Make all things equal…… except for the IV • All research designs attempt to ensure that the Experimental and Control groups are as similar as possible on all characteristics except for the IV • They aim to make the only difference between the groups whether they were exposed to the IV (experimental group) or not (control group)

More Related