1997
DOI: 10.3758/bf03209396
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The stroop effect and the myth of automaticity

Abstract: A widespread view in cognition is that once acquired through extensive practice, mental skills such as reading are automatic. Lexical and semantic analyses of single words are said to be uncontrollable in the sense that they cannot be prevented. Over the past 60 years, apparently convincing support for this assumption has come from hundreds of experiments in which skilled readers have processed an irrelevant word in the Stroop task despite explicit instructions not to, even when so doing would hurt color ident… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

17
302
4
9

Year Published

2002
2002
2020
2020

Publication Types

Select...
8
2

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 241 publications
(332 citation statements)
references
References 22 publications
(18 reference statements)
17
302
4
9
Order By: Relevance
“…In summary, these results suggest that semantic activation is critically modulated by the amount of attentional resources allocated to the prime word, and that auditory divided attention affects the processing from the word level to the semantic level, consistent with numerous studies of visual word recognition (e.g., Besner, Stolz, & Boutilier, 1997;Chiappe et al, 1996;Smith & Besner, 2001;Stolz & Besner, 1996). In addition, the difference in pattern between semantic priming and repetition priming permits us to reject other explanations for our results, such as the idea that the high divided-attention condition caused spreading activation to decay more rapidly than did the other conditions or that tone decision delayed target responding so that spreading activation from a fully activated prime word decayed prior to target responding.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…In summary, these results suggest that semantic activation is critically modulated by the amount of attentional resources allocated to the prime word, and that auditory divided attention affects the processing from the word level to the semantic level, consistent with numerous studies of visual word recognition (e.g., Besner, Stolz, & Boutilier, 1997;Chiappe et al, 1996;Smith & Besner, 2001;Stolz & Besner, 1996). In addition, the difference in pattern between semantic priming and repetition priming permits us to reject other explanations for our results, such as the idea that the high divided-attention condition caused spreading activation to decay more rapidly than did the other conditions or that tone decision delayed target responding so that spreading activation from a fully activated prime word decayed prior to target responding.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 62%
“…Although Besner and colleagues (Besner et al, 1997(Besner et al, , 2009) have argued for the automaticity of at least early stages of lexical identification, others have demonstrated substantial modulation of ERP and priming indices of lexical or semantic activation as a function of a concurrent or preceding task (Kiefer & Martens, 2010;Lien, Ruthruff, Cornett, Godin, & Allen, 2008;Rabovsky, Alvarez, Hohlfeld, & Sommer, 2008;Vachon & Jolicoeur, 2011). Our own findings seem to be on a continuum with the latter group of studies.…”
Section: Implications For the Automaticity Of Word Readingsupporting
confidence: 44%
“…Similarly, Stroop interference can be reduced or eliminated when only a single letter is colored instead of the whole word, as in the standard version of the task (Besner, Stolz, & Boutilier, 1997). In both tasks, allocating attention to low-level features of the word is assumed to hinder semantic processing.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%