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Universal Patterns in Color-Emotion Associations Are Further Shaped by Linguistic and Geographic Proximity

Authors :
Marietta Papadatou-Pastou
Eka Chkonia
Ahmad Abu-Akel
Amer Chamseddine
Aya Ahmed Hasan
Lyudmyla Romanyuk
Daniel Oberfeld
Eduardo Fonseca-Pedrero
Grażyna Wąsowicz
Gina M. Grimshaw
Sunčica Zdravković
Marjaana Lindeman
Eric Laurent
Mari Uusküla
Niloufar Pouyan
Alicia Pérez-Albéniz
Philip C. Mefoh
Ahmed M. Abdel-Khalek
Alejandro Salgado Montejo
Abdulrahman S. Al-Rasheed
Violeta Corona
Nele Dael
Bodil S.A. Karlsson
Maya Roinishvili
Jelena Havelka
Yulia A. Griber
Jean-Philippe Antonietti
Lynn Marquardt
Suvi Vainio
Yann Schrag
Christine Mohr
Victoria Bogushevskaya
Marco Hirnstein
Domicele Jonauskaite
Meng Zhang
Aygun Sultanova
Doctoral Programme in Cognition, Learning, Instruction and Communication
Department of Psychology and Logopedics
Medicum
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Bogushevskaya, Victoria
Source :
RIUR. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de La Rioja, instname, 1245–1260, Psychological Science, vol. 31, no. 10, pp. 1245-1260, Psychological Science
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications Inc., 2020.

Abstract

Many of us “see red,” “feel blue,” or “turn green with envy.” Are such color-emotion associations fundamental to our shared cognitive architecture, or are they cultural creations learned through our languages and traditions? To answer these questions, we tested emotional associations of colors in 4,598 participants from 30 nations speaking 22 native languages. Participants associated 20 emotion concepts with 12 color terms. Pattern-similarity analyses revealed universal color-emotion associations (average similarity coefficient r = .88). However, local differences were also apparent. A machine-learning algorithm revealed that nation predicted color-emotion associations above and beyond those observed universally. Similarity was greater when nations were linguistically or geographically close. This study highlights robust universal color-emotion associations, further modulated by linguistic and geographic factors. These results pose further theoretical and empirical questions about the affective properties of color and may inform practice in applied domains, such as well-being and design.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RIUR. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de La Rioja, instname, 1245–1260, Psychological Science, vol. 31, no. 10, pp. 1245-1260, Psychological Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17c970d5eb01233dc1c89bdda54397c6