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Click the INK COLOR, ignore the word meaning.
Example: the word "BLUE" — click RED
Question 0/30 0   ✗ 0 30.0s
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Stroop Test Result

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The Stroop Effect Explained

Named after psychologist John Ridley Stroop (1935), this test demonstrates cognitive interference — your brain's automatic reading response competes with the task of identifying ink color. Slower responses and more errors indicate weaker cognitive inhibition.

Excellent cognitive control is linked to better focus, impulse control, and executive function. Try also the Reaction Time Test and the Attention Test for a full focus profile.

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The Stroop Effect Explained

In 1935, psychologist John Ridley Stroop published one of psychology's most famous experiments: people are slower and less accurate when naming the ink color of a word that spells a different color name. The word "RED" written in blue ink slows your color-naming because reading is so automatic that your brain processes the word meaning before you can suppress it. This cognitive interference is the Stroop Effect — and it has been replicated thousands of times in virtually every culture and language studied.

Our Stroop test presents 30 color words in conflicting ink colors and requires you to click the ink color as fast as possible. It measures cognitive control — specifically your prefrontal cortex's ability to select a less-automatic response (color naming) over a more-automatic one (reading). The magnitude of interference — how much slower you are on incongruent trials — is a direct measure of your executive inhibition capacity.

What Stroop Scores Predict

High Stroop performance correlates with: better impulse control in daily life, superior multitasking ability, stronger resistance to distraction, and better performance on standardized cognitive assessments. Clinical researchers use the Stroop test to assess frontal lobe function — patients with prefrontal damage, ADHD, or early dementia show markedly elevated Stroop interference effects.

Scores of 28+ out of 30 in 30 seconds represent the top tier of performance. The global average on our platform is approximately 22–24 correct. Cognitive control — unlike raw processing speed — responds well to mindfulness training, regular meditation, and strategic cognitive practice. Try also the Flanker Test and Go/No-Go Test to build a complete executive function profile.

Related tests: ↔️ Flanker Test 🛑 Go/No-Go 🎯 Attention & Focus 🔬 N-Back