Abstract
The purpose of this experiment was to determine whether the position of the colored letter in Besner et al's single-letter-coloured Stroop task affects the amount of interference observed in naming times. The participants of this study was randomly gathered by 2nd year Psychology students at Monash University (N = 100). The participants were presented with a single stimulus on each paper and were told to ignore the letter string and to identify the either one of the three colours in a quickly and accurate manner. The result under the whole word on colour name has the highest mean on Stroop interferences compared to the whole word on non-word control. Due to some limitation in the methodology, the effects of the Stroop interference on the different positioning of the colour letters to word and nonword colour would not be able to justify in this experiment. Therefore, more improved researches are needed, to justify the Stroop effect.
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