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Thu 23 Aug, 2007 05:10 pm
Study says men prefer blue, women like lavender
Jia-rui Chong
Los Angeles Times
August 21, 2007
Women's brains seemed to be hard-wired to prefer lavender, while men's tend toward blue.
That's what a group of British neuroscientists found in an experiment to determine whether people's attraction to certain colors was cultural or biological.
"There does seem to be a universal color preference, which seems to be hard-wired into our brains," said Dr. Anya Hurlbert, the study's lead author. "We were very surprised by how robust the results were."
Hurlbert and research associate Yazhu Ling, both of Newcastle University in Britain, showed 171 white Britons and 37 recent Chinese immigrants a pair of colored rectangles on a computer screen and asked them to click on their preferred color as quickly as possible. The subjects were shown about 1,000 pairs of colors.
If culture dictated color preference, then the researchers guessed that the Chinese would favor red - a symbol of good luck in that culture.
As it turned out, both Britons and Chinese had a strong attachment to blue, although the Chinese tended to favor slightly more reddish hues.
The most interesting finding was the difference between men and women.
Women consistently favored more reddish tints, regardless of their cultural background. The most popular single color among women was a heliotrope shade of pink-purple, the researchers found.
Men had a penchant for blue-green hues, picking sky blue most often, according to the study released Monday in the journal Current Biology.
Hurlbert surmised that women might have evolved an interest in red because of their primary role as gatherers in early human history. "This fits with the notion that the red-green dimension of color vision evolved to enable better discrimination of red fruit against green leaves," she said.
Another possibility was that women's interest in purple and pink might help them distinguish subtle changes in emotion in people's faces, Hurlbert said.
Eh. Maybe more british men like to sail and more women like to decorate the home in warm tones.
I'm much more complicated. Colors work to some extent in a context of what is next to them, their exact hue, tonality, blady blady blah. I can easily like one blue and not another very much. There are cultural contexts; there are mood contexts. After five months of rain and drizzle, the people in my last home town craved Hawaii and loud shirts. There are associations, so that what I might like on a rose bush can be other that I'd choose in lipstick. I bet that survey used only primary colors.
In my getting to be long life I've loved turquoise, entirely despised turquoise, and sometimes enjoy turquoise in context. I'm one of the women who occasionally likes pinks and lavenders, though lavender is easy to get very very sick of. I'd say my liking for lavender is quite spare, though I just a few hours ago decided to save a lavender blue turtleneck. I could be quoted a couple of decades ago about how I liked a certain purpley pink (have to check if that is called heliotrope), how it seemed to connect to some facet of my brain. Soon after that, plastic wastebaskets came out in that color and I can only now begin to admit the color to allowability range in small bits.
Maybe the blue for boys' nurseries and pink for girls is hardwired. Maybe nurseries affect choices decades later.
There was, years ago now, some study done about room color re quieting disturbed patients or prisoners. I forget the details entirely, except that a certain color pink was supposd to be calming. Might have even been heliotrope. Have no idea if that ever worked out in real life.