Title of article
Driven by Information: A Tectonic Theory of Stroop Effects
Author/Authors
Melara، Robert D. نويسنده , , Algom، Daniel نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-421
From page
422
To page
0
Abstract
The goal of avoiding distraction (e.g., ignoring words when naming their print colors in a Stroop task) is opposed intrinsically by the penchant to process conspicuous and correlated characteristics of the environment (e.g., noticing trial-to-trial associations between the colors and the words). To reconcile these opposing forces, the authors propose a tectonic theory of selective attention in which 2 memorybased structures—dimensional imbalance and dimensional uncertainty—drive selection by processing salient, surprising, and/or correlated information contained within and across stimulus dimensions. Each structure modulates the buildup of excitation to targets and the buildup of inhibition to distractors and to memories of previous stimuli. Tectonic theory is implemented to simulate the impact of 4 types of context on the presence, magnitude, and direction of congruity effects and task effects in the Stroop paradigm. The tectonic model is shown to surpass other formal models in explaining the range and diversity of Stroop effects.
Keywords
SSRI , single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) , Brain circuit in OCD , Symptomatic challenge , Sertraline
Journal title
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW
Record number
81929
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