Method Participants 9 participants participated in the study, 5 in the first group and 4 in the second group. The first group includes Daina Berry, Justin Quintrell, Paige Govey, Natalie Campbell, Jared Flannery, the second group includes Megan Powell, Kyle Sugonis, Abigail Mrozek and Vanessa Landgrave. These participants were undergraduates of Dr. Kelling's 11:00 AM Experimental Psychology course. Students participated in the research to obtain the passing score of the class assignment.
Introduction: In this Stroop experiment, we tried to study perceptual reasoning by showing the stroop color model and the controlled black and white model to 20 participants and comparing the two reaction times. Stroop investigates perceptual interference and proves that perception is a dynamic process that may be affected. - Death at Red Death Mask After reading Edgar Allan Poe's "Red Death Mask" (317-22), the reader can only conclude that death is the subject of another thrilling horror story. Other critics like Patricia H. Wheat regard this story as a battle of life and death (51-56). But Leonardo Cast brought an interesting theory to the story - "According to the speaker himself no one can survive - the only person who died in his life (life)
Experiments with Stroop (1935, Edgar, cited in 2007) examined the relationship between the automation process and the control process and the possible interference they may cause; this is now commonly referred to as the stroop effect ing. One variant of the experiment involves participants periodically reading the words and under the first condition the color neutral words are written in color ink so that the participant knows the apparent color associated with that word Does not have. In the second condition (Stroop condition), words are written in color using different written words for color. Participant's job is to name the ink color of a word as soon as possible under two conditions. Stroop discovered that color neutral conditions are easier to perform than Stroop conditions; experiments have concluded that there is significant interference in the ink color reading and control process (Edgar, 2007).