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Main Authors: Sohrabi, Ahmad, West, Robert L.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.19128
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author Sohrabi, Ahmad
West, Robert L.
author_facet Sohrabi, Ahmad
West, Robert L.
contents In typical Stroop experiments, participants perform better when the colors and words are congruent compared to when they are incongruent or neutral. Paradoxically, in some experimental conditions, neutral trials are faster than congruent trials. This phenomenon is known as Reverse Facilitation Effect (RFE). However, RFE has not been consistently replicated, leading to the so-called fragile results. There are some models that capture this effect, but they are not parsimonious. Here we employed our previous model of priming effect, without its conflict monitoring module, to demonstrate that RFE, including its fragility, is mainly due to attentional dynamics with limited resources. The simulations of the RFE resulted from weak attentional activation for neutral stimuli (e.g., non-color or nonword strings) that causes less attentional refraction for the target stimuli (e.g., font colors). The refractory period or attenuation of attention usually happens when meaningful stimuli (color name primes) are used along font color targets. This simpler model provides a straightforward understanding of the underlying processes.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2503_19128
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Fragility of the Reverse Facilitation Effect in the Stroop Task: A Dynamic Neurocognitive Model
Sohrabi, Ahmad
West, Robert L.
Neurons and Cognition
In typical Stroop experiments, participants perform better when the colors and words are congruent compared to when they are incongruent or neutral. Paradoxically, in some experimental conditions, neutral trials are faster than congruent trials. This phenomenon is known as Reverse Facilitation Effect (RFE). However, RFE has not been consistently replicated, leading to the so-called fragile results. There are some models that capture this effect, but they are not parsimonious. Here we employed our previous model of priming effect, without its conflict monitoring module, to demonstrate that RFE, including its fragility, is mainly due to attentional dynamics with limited resources. The simulations of the RFE resulted from weak attentional activation for neutral stimuli (e.g., non-color or nonword strings) that causes less attentional refraction for the target stimuli (e.g., font colors). The refractory period or attenuation of attention usually happens when meaningful stimuli (color name primes) are used along font color targets. This simpler model provides a straightforward understanding of the underlying processes.
title The Fragility of the Reverse Facilitation Effect in the Stroop Task: A Dynamic Neurocognitive Model
topic Neurons and Cognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2503.19128