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Teoria de Detecció de Senyals×Stroop Task×
CampPsicologiaPsicologia
FamíliaHypothesis testHypothesis test
Any d'origen19661935
Autor originalDavid Green and John SwetsJohn Ridley Stroop
TipusSignal detection frameworkInterference task
Font seminalGreen, D. M., & Swets, J. A. (1966). Signal detection theory and psychophysics. Wiley. link ↗Stroop, J. R. (1935). Studies of interference in serial verbal reactions. Journal of Experimental Psychology, 18(6), 643-662. DOI ↗
ÀliesSDT, Detection TheoryStroop Effect, Color-Word Task
Relacionats00
ResumSignal Detection Theory (SDT) is a framework for analyzing how observers detect signals embedded in noise, accounting for both sensory capacity and decision-making bias. Developed by Green and Swets in the 1960s, it provides a principled method for measuring sensitivity and response criteria separately, making it foundational in psychophysics, perception research, and diagnostic decision-making.The Stroop task is a classic measure of cognitive control and selective attention. Participants name the color of words while ignoring the words' semantic content. When the color and word meaning match (e.g., the word 'red' printed in red ink), responses are fast. When they conflict (e.g., the word 'red' printed in blue ink), response times increase dramatically. This Stroop effect reveals how automatic word reading interferes with color naming, indexed by the difference in reaction times between congruent and incongruent conditions.
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