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A study to investigate the relationship between the Stroop Interference Task and a Self-

Monitoring Task.


Jack Powell

Abstract

The Stroop Interference Task is named after J. Ridley Stroop who discovered this task in 1935. The

task seeks to observe the delay in reaction time between congruent and incongruent stimuli. In our

experiment, 177 participants were required to respond to the colour of the word while ignoring its

meaning. Congruent trials involved the colour of the word being the same as its meaning. Whereas

incongruent trials involved the colour of the word differing from its meaning. Furthermore, the

experiment aimed to investigate whether there was a relationship with Snyder and Gangestad’s

(1985) 18 question Self-Monitoring Task. Each participant did both conditions. The Stroop Task did

elicit a significant interference effect, but our results showed that there was no correlation between

the two tasks.




Introduction


Plan


Aim- To investigate the relationship between the Stroop task and the self-monitoring task.


What was the Stroop task? - Designed by J. Stroop in 1935. Delay in reaction time when processing

different words when printed as the same colour or a different colour.


What is the self-monitoring task? - 18 questions (Snyder, 1974) but was originally 25 (Snyder &

Gangestad., 1985). It was a set of personal reaction questions to test a person’s expressive

behaviour. Participants answered with either ‘true’ or ‘false’ to the questions/statements.



1

, Research- Those who score higher in the Self-Monitoring Task will do better on the Stroop task.

Better cognitively and pay more attention. However, our findings do not correlate with this.


Hypothesis- Those participants who score higher in the Self-monitoring task will make less mistakes

in the Stroop task- vice versa (will support Koch).




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