Abstract

It is estimated that inherited red-green color deficiency, which involves both the protan and deutan deficiency types, is common in men. For red-green defective observers, some reddish colors appear desaturated and brownish, unlike those seen by normal observers. Despite its prevalence, few studies have investigated the effects that red-green color deficiency has on the psychological properties of colors (color emotions). The current study investigated the influence of red-green color deficiency on the following six color emotions: cleanliness, freshness, hardness, preference, warmth, and weight. Specifically, this study aimed to: (1) reveal differences between normal and red-green defective observers in rating patterns of six color emotions; (2) examine differences in color emotions related to the three cardinal channels in human color vision; and (3) explore relationships between color emotions and color naming behavior. Thirteen men and 10 women with normal vision and 13 men who were red-green defective performed both a color naming task and an emotion rating task with 32 colors from the Berkeley Color Project (BCP). Results revealed noticeable differences in the cleanliness and hardness ratings between the normal vision observers, particularly in women, and red-green defective observers, which appeared mainly for colors in the orange to cyan range, and in the preference and warmth ratings for colors with cyan and purple hues. Similarly, naming errors also mainly occurred in the cyan colors. A regression analysis that included the three cone-contrasts (i.e., red-green, blue-yellow, and luminance) as predictors significantly accounted for variability in color emotion ratings for the red-green defective observers as much as the normal individuals. Expressly, for warmth ratings, the weight of the red-green opponent channel was significantly lower in color defective observers than in normal participants. In addition, the analyses for individual warmth ratings in the red-green defective group revealed that luminance cone-contrast was a significant predictor in most red-green-defective individuals. Together, these results suggest that red-green defective observers tend to rely on the blue-yellow channel and luminance to compensate for the weak sensitivity of long- and medium-wavelength (L-M) cone-contrasts, when rating color warmth.

Highlights

  • There are three types of photoreceptors in the human retina, short (S), medium (M), and long (L) wavelength-sensitive cones

  • Individuals characterized as protan or deutan types are called red-green color vision defects

  • The results suggested that dichromats have different preferences than that of those with normal color vision; dichromats rated yellow best, unlike normal individuals

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Summary

Introduction

There are three types of photoreceptors in the human retina, short (S), medium (M), and long (L) wavelength-sensitive cones. In the deutan type, the normal M gene is replaced with the L pigment gene (deuteranopia), or with an anomalous pigment gene (deuteranomaly) (Neitz & Neitz, 2011; Smith & Pokorny, 2003). Individuals characterized as protan or deutan types are called red-green color vision defects. Red-green color vision defects are classified into the following four types: protanope, deuteranope (red-green dichromat), protanomalous, or deuteranomalous (red-green anomalous trichromats) (Neitz & Neitz, 2011). Deuteranomalous individuals have varying degrees of trichromatic color vision with great variation. This differentiation stems from the S pigments and two narrowly separated photopigments that absorb in the L wavelength region of the spectrum. The severity of the deuteranomalous defect depends on the degree of similarity among the residual photopigments (Neitz, Neitz & Kainz, 1996)

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