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John Ridley Stroop : ウィキペディア英語版 | John Ridley Stroop
John Ridley Stroop (; March 21, 1897 – September 1, 1973), better known as J. Ridley Stroop, was an American psychologist whose research in cognition and interference continues to be considered by some as the gold standard in attentional studies and profound enough to continue to be cited for relevance into the 21st century.〔 However, Christianity was the real passion of his life; psychology was simply an occupation.〔 ==Early life== Stroop was born in the rural community of Hall's Hill, outside Murfreesboro in Rutherford County, Tennessee.〔 In poor health as an infant, his family thought that he was not going to live long so he was spared part of the heaviest farm work.〔 He was brilliant in his local county school at Kitrell, finishing the first of his class. He attended David Lipscomb High School in Nashville, graduating in 1919. Stroop then began to study at David Lipscomb College, then a two-year junior college, in Nashville, Tennessee, an institution where he would later return as a faculty member after his university doctoral work. Two years later, in 1921 he obtained his diploma from Lipscomb, graduating first in his class.〔 On December 23 of the that year (1921) John Ridley Stroop married Zelma Dunn with whom he had 3 sons. Zelma was the great-niece of Margaret Zellner, wife of David Lipscomb.〔
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