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2 According to Jensen and Rohwer (1966), Jaensch (1929) was the first to combine the word and color stimuli in a potentially conflicting situation.Perhaps, then, Jaensch should receive at least partial credit, but the "Jaensch-Stroop effect" is an extremely unwieldy label.3 Stroop changed the color-naming control-condition cards from Experiment 2 to Experiment 3. The solid-color squares were replaced by a nonalphanumeric character, which, in Stroop's view, was more like a letter in appearance and more easily colored to match the shades of the letters on the experimental cards.The stimulus Stroop chose was the swastika.
Colin M. MacLeod (Tue,) studied this question.