About the Stroop Effect
What is the Stroop Effect?
The Stroop Effect is one of the most famous and well-studied phenomena in cognitive psychology. First described by John Ridley Stroop in 1935, it demonstrates the interference that occurs when the brain processes conflicting pieces of information simultaneously.
In the classic experiment, participants are asked to name the ink color of a word, where the word itself spells a different color. For example, the word "RED" printed in blue ink. Most people find it significantly harder (and slower) to name the ink color when it conflicts with the word, compared to when they match.
Why Does It Happen?
The Stroop Effect occurs because reading is an automatic process for literate adults — you can't help but read words you see. Naming colors, on the other hand, requirescontrolled processing. When these two processes conflict, your brain needs extra time and effort to override the automatic reading response and produce the correct color name.
This conflict is managed by the anterior cingulate cortex and the prefrontal cortex, brain regions responsible for executive function, attention, and conflict resolution.
Key Concepts
Interference Score
The difference in reaction time between incongruent trials (conflicting information) and congruent trials (matching information). A higher score means greater cognitive interference.
Automatic vs Controlled Processing
Automatic processing happens without conscious effort (like reading). Controlled processing requires deliberate attention (like naming colors). The Stroop Effect arises from the conflict between these two types.
Congruent vs Incongruent
Congruent trials have matching information (word "RED" in red ink). Incongruent trials have conflicting information (word "RED" in blue ink). The difference in performance between these conditions reveals the strength of the interference effect.
The 12 Variants
Since Stroop's original 1935 experiment, researchers have developed many variations to study different types of cognitive interference. This site features 12 distinct variants:
Clinical and Research Applications
The Stroop test is widely used in clinical neuropsychology to assess executive function, attention disorders, brain injuries, and the effects of aging on cognition. Researchers also use Stroop variants with brain imaging (fMRI, EEG) to study the neural mechanisms of attention and cognitive control.
The Emotional Stroop variant is particularly valuable in clinical psychology for detecting attentional biases in anxiety disorders, PTSD, and depression.