Stroop Test
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Subject Areas on Research
- Blood Pressure Reactivity to Psychological Stress in Young Adults and Cognition in Midlife: The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) Study.
- Cognitive manifestations of drinking-smoking associations: preliminary findings with a cross-primed Stroop task.
- Control by association: Transfer of implicitly primed attentional states across linked stimuli.
- Cross-modal stimulus conflict: the behavioral effects of stimulus input timing in a visual-auditory Stroop task.
- Determinants of congruency sequence effects without learning and memory confounds.
- Effects of adult age and blood pressure on executive function and speed of processing.
- Effects of mindfulness, reappraisal, and suppression on sad mood and cognitive resources.
- Effects of varenicline and cognitive bias modification on neural response to smoking-related cues: study protocol for a randomized controlled study.
- Evaluating the learning of stimulus-control associations through incidental memory of reinforcement events.
- Hypervigilance for fear after basolateral amygdala damage in humans.
- Neural Dynamics of Conflict Control in Working Memory.
- Neural conflict-control mechanisms improve memory for target stimuli.
- Nicotine withdrawal modulates frontal brain function during an affective Stroop task.
- Performance feedback promotes proactive but not reactive adaptation of conflict-control.
- Priming and backward influences in the human brain: processing interactions during the stroop interference effect.
- Reappraisal and mindfulness: a comparison of subjective effects and cognitive costs.
- Reward associations reduce behavioral interference by changing the temporal dynamics of conflict processing.
- Synergistic effects of marijuana abuse and HIV infection on neural activation during a cognitive interference task.
- The Caudate Nucleus Mediates Learning of Stimulus-Control State Associations.
- The influence of reward associations on conflict processing in the Stroop task.
- The neural underpinnings of how reward associations can both guide and misguide attention.
- The working memory stroop effect: when internal representations clash with external stimuli.
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Keywords of People
- Egner, Tobias, Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke Science & Society