Abstract

According to a growing consensus, the Stroop effect is understood as a phenomenon of conflict and cognitive control. A tidal wave of recent research alleges that incongruent Stroop stimuli generate conflict, which is then managed and resolved by top-down cognitive control. We argue otherwise: control studies fail to account for major Stroop results obtained over a century-long history of research. We list some of the most compelling developments and show that no control account can serve as a viable explanation for major Stroop phenomena and that there exist more parsimonious explanations for other Stroop related phenomena. Against a wealth of studies and emerging consensus, we posit that data-driven selective attention best accounts for the gamut of existing Stroop results. The case for data-driven attention is not new: a mere twenty-five years ago, the Stroop effect was considered “the gold standard” of attention (MacLeod, 1992). We identify four pitfalls plaguing conflict monitoring and control studies of the Stroop effect and show that the notion of top-down control is gratuitous. Looking at the Stroop effect from a historical perspective, we argue that the recent paradigm change from stimulus-driven selective attention to control is unwarranted. Applying Occam’s razor, the effects marshaled in support of the control view are better explained by a selectivity of attention account. Moreover, many Stroop results, ignored in the control literature, are inconsistent with any control account of the effect.

Highlights

  • Specialty section: This article was submitted to Cognition, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology

  • We show that factoring in basic findings of proper Stroop research challenges the validity of any theory of conflict monitoring and control

  • Performance in the Stroop task and the resulting Stroop effect does not seem to involve higher-order cognitive level processes of control, nor does it seem likely that minute top-down penetrations determine responding in the Stroop and allied tasks

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Summary

Introduction

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Cognition, a section of the journal Frontiers in Psychology. Conflict monitoring theory (Botvinick et al, 2001) proposes that performance in the Stroop task is governed by central control, which adjusts the attention allocated to the target color on a trial-to-trial basis. Stroop-incongruent stimuli generate a large amount of conflict (due to the mismatch between the color and the word).

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