In two experiments, subjects pressed a key labeled Red or Green in response to a 100 msec duration stimulus presented to the left or right visual field. In Experiment I, subjects responded to the meaning of Stroop words; the stimulus was the word Red or Green printed in red, green, or white ink. In Experiment II, subjects responded to ink color; the stimulus was either the word Red or Green printed in red or green ink or a red or green color patch. In each experiment, there were 20 strongly right-handed subjects and 20 strongly left-handed subjects. Half the subjects in each handedness group were male and half were female. In both experiments, RT was faster when words were presented to the right visual field than to the left visual field, suggesting that both meaning and ink color of Stroop words were processed more quickly in the left hemisphere. Results of both experiments revealed faster reactions when meaning and ink color of the Stroop words were congruent than when they were not. A comparison with baseline trials indicated that the RT difference between responses to congruent and incongruent Stroop words was due to the incongruent cue interfering with information processing rather than to the congruent cue facilitating processing. Hypothesized interactions between stimulus position, congruence, handedness and sex were not significant.
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