Psychophysiology: Group Project Presentation brought to you by: Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin.

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Psychophysiology: Group Project Presentation brought to you by: Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin

Transcript of Psychophysiology: Group Project Presentation brought to you by: Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin.

Page 1: Psychophysiology: Group Project Presentation brought to you by: Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin.

Psychophysiology: Group Project

Presentation brought to you by:Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin

Page 2: Psychophysiology: Group Project Presentation brought to you by: Amanda, Tracy, Jon, Erin.

Abstract

Introduced concept of priming.

“In a typical priming study, people tend to respond faster or more accurately to stimuli they have seen before” (Bernstein and Nash 139).

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Hypothesis

Exercising memory by playing a memory game prior to taking a memory test will lead to a higher score on that test.

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Operational Definitions

Independent Variable:

The playing of Simon prior to taking the memory test.

Dependent Variable:

Score on the memory test.

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Guidelines For Collecting Data

6 Participants split into 2 groups. Primed Not Primed

Participants cannot be involved in a math course.

Memory game (Simon) played for 3 minutes.

Participants allowed to view memory test for 30 seconds.

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Data (number of pictures remembered)

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Interesting Facts

Most Remembered Computer- 6 Guitar- 5 Butterfly, House, Lock- 5 each

• primacy effect

Least Remembered Telephone- 0 Plane- 1 Kite- 1

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Conclusions

Primed group remembered more pictures than the non-primed group.

The difference was significant. Average number of primed: 12.6 Average number of non- primed: 9.3

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Future Experiments

Allow participants to view pictures for longer amount of time.

Increase playing time of memory game.

By changing the experiment, the number remembered by each group may change.

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Bibliography

Schrobsdorff, H., M. Ihrke, B. Kabisch, J. Behrendt, M. Hasselhorn, and J. Herrmann. "A Computational Approach to Negative Priming." Connection Science 19 (2007): 203-221. Academic Search Premier. EBSCO. 30 Nov. 2007.

Bernstein, Douglas A., and Peggy W. Nash. Essentials of Psychology. 4th ed. Houghton Mifflin Company, 2008.