Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?

The color red seems to be consistently associated with the concept of anger. Beyond semantic associations, it has been suggested that the color red enhances our ability to perceive anger in faces. However, previous studies often lack proper color control or the results are confounded by the presence...

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Main Authors: Tarja Peromaa, Maria Olkkonen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215610
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spelling doaj-6f744607f90843bba8fec8d0dc9d70152021-03-03T20:44:05ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01144e021561010.1371/journal.pone.0215610Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?Tarja PeromaaMaria OlkkonenThe color red seems to be consistently associated with the concept of anger. Beyond semantic associations, it has been suggested that the color red enhances our ability to perceive anger in faces. However, previous studies often lack proper color control or the results are confounded by the presence of several emotions. Moreover, the magnitude of the (potential) effect of red has not been quantified. To address these caveats, we quantified the effect of facial color and background color on anger with psychometric functions measured with the method-of-constant-stimuli while facial hue or surround hue was varied in CIELAB color space. Stimulus sequences were generated by morphing between neutral and angry faces. For the facial color, the average chromaticity of the faces was shifted by ΔE 12/20 in red, yellow, green and blue directions. For the background color, the hue was either neutral or saturated red, green or blue. Both facial redness and surround redness enhanced perceived anger slightly, by 3-4 morph-%. Other colors did not affect perceived anger. As the magnitude of the enhancement is generally small and the effect is robust only in a small subset of the participants, we question the practical significance of red in anger recognition.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215610
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tarja Peromaa
Maria Olkkonen
spellingShingle Tarja Peromaa
Maria Olkkonen
Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tarja Peromaa
Maria Olkkonen
author_sort Tarja Peromaa
title Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
title_short Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
title_full Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
title_fullStr Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
title_full_unstemmed Red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - But how much?
title_sort red color facilitates the detection of facial anger - but how much?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The color red seems to be consistently associated with the concept of anger. Beyond semantic associations, it has been suggested that the color red enhances our ability to perceive anger in faces. However, previous studies often lack proper color control or the results are confounded by the presence of several emotions. Moreover, the magnitude of the (potential) effect of red has not been quantified. To address these caveats, we quantified the effect of facial color and background color on anger with psychometric functions measured with the method-of-constant-stimuli while facial hue or surround hue was varied in CIELAB color space. Stimulus sequences were generated by morphing between neutral and angry faces. For the facial color, the average chromaticity of the faces was shifted by ΔE 12/20 in red, yellow, green and blue directions. For the background color, the hue was either neutral or saturated red, green or blue. Both facial redness and surround redness enhanced perceived anger slightly, by 3-4 morph-%. Other colors did not affect perceived anger. As the magnitude of the enhancement is generally small and the effect is robust only in a small subset of the participants, we question the practical significance of red in anger recognition.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215610
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