A rational look at the emotional stroop phenomenon: a generic slowdown, not a stroop effect

J Exp Psychol Gen. 2004 Sep;133(3):323-38. doi: 10.1037/0096-3445.133.3.323.

Abstract

The role of Stroop processes in the emotional Stroop effect was subjected to a conceptual scrutiny augmented by a series of experiments entailing reading or lexical decision as well as color naming. The analysis showed that the Stroop effect is not defined in the emotional Stroop task. The experiments showed that reading, lexical decision, and color naming all are slower with emotional words and that this delay is immune to task-irrelevant variation and to changes in the relative salience of the words and the colors. The delay was absent when emotional and neutral words appeared in a single block. A threat-driven generic slowdown is implicated, not a selective attention mechanism associated with the classic Stroop effect.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial
  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Analysis of Variance
  • Attention
  • Color Perception*
  • Emotions*
  • Fear
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Inhibition, Psychological*
  • Israel
  • Male
  • Reaction Time
  • Reading*
  • Semantics