Abstract

In addition to their perceptual or aesthetic function, colors often carry conceptual meaning. In quizzes, for instance, true and false answers are typically marked in green and red. In three experiments, we used a Stroop task to investigate automatic green-true associations and red-false associations, respectively. In Experiments 1 and 2, stimuli were true statements (e.g., “tables are furniture”) and false statements (e.g., “bananas are buildings”) that were displayed in different combination of green, red, and gray depending on the experimental condition. In Experiment 3, we used true-related and false-related words shown in green, red, or gray. Participants had to indicate the validity (or semantic meaning) of each statement (or word) as fast and as accurately as possible. We expected that participants would perform best when they had to categorize green stimuli as “true” and red stimuli as “false”. The prediction was only confirmed when green and red stimuli were presented within the same context (i.e., same experimental condition). This finding supports the dimension-specificity hypothesis which states that cross-modal associations (here: associations between color and validity) depend on the context (here: the color-context). Moreover, the observed color-validity effects were stronger when participants had to categorize single words instead of sentences and when they had to provide speeded responses. Taken together, these results suggest that controlled processing counteracts the influence of automatic color associations on true/false responses.

Highlights

  • Colors are omnipresent in everyday life and shape the perception of our environment

  • response times (RTs), Fs < 1, indicating that the selected colors did not differ in perceptual fluency

  • RTs were unaffected by target p0r.2e8se],nc[0e.,0F0s, ≤0. 10.68]2,apnsd ≥[ 00..0109,00, .2p20s] .≤4 0M.0o7r,eo9v0e%r, Confidence intervals (CIs) [0.00, there was no significant color by target interaction in any condition, Fs ≤ 1.62, ps ≥ 0.214, 2 p s ≤ 0.06, CIs

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Colors are omnipresent in everyday life and shape the perception of our environment. colors do have a perceptual or aesthetic function; they communicate information and can influence emotions, cognitions, and behaviors (Elliot and Maier 2007; Elliot et al 2007). There is strong empirical evidence that red signals danger, the results are less clear with regard to a green–safety association (Pravossoudovitch et al 2014) Besides such studies that have examined color associations with the concepts failure/success and danger/safety, there is little research on the meaning of the complementary colors red and green in other semantic contexts. In a study on memory for truth and falsity, Pantazi et al (2018) claimed that ”Green and red are generally associated with concepts of truthfulness versus falsity [...]” To our knowledge, this is the first study to empirically investigate the proposed associations between the color green and the semantic attribute true as well as between the color red and the semantic attribute false. These lightness–valence associations would potentially confound the results for the color–validity associations, if the colors differed in lightness

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call