Why do non-color words interfere with color naming?
Data(s) |
01/01/2002
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Resumo |
In the non-color-word Stroop task, university students' response latencies were longer for low-frequency than for higher frequency target words. Visual identity primes facilitated color naming in groups reading the prime silently or processing it semantically (Experiment 1) but did not when participants generated a rhyme of the prime (Experiment 3). With auditory identity primes, generating an associate or a rhyme of the prime produced interference (Experiments 2 and 3). Color-naming latencies were longer for nonwords than for words (Experiment 4). There was a small long-term repetition benefit in color naming for low-frequency words that had been presented in the lexical decision task (Experiment 5). Facilitation of word recognition speeds color naming except when phonological activation of the base word increases response competition. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
American Psychological Association |
Palavras-Chave | #Psychology #Psychology, Experimental #Lexical Decision Task #Term Implicit Memory #Emotional Information #Episodic Recognition #Stroop Interference #Attentional Bias #Anxiety-states #Threat Cues #Time Course #Frequency #170101 Biological Psychology (Neuropsychology, Psychopharmacology, Physiological Psychology) #C1 |
Tipo |
Journal Article |