What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability

The Dress photograph, first displayed on the internet in 2015, revealed stunning individual differences in color perception. The aim of this study was to investigate if lay-persons believed that the question about The Dress colors was answerable. Past research has found that optimism is related to j...

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Main Authors: Bodil S. A. Karlsson, Carl Martin Allwood
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01808/full
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spelling doaj-fe99fb2da03f42ff8027a48d96d084e12020-11-24T22:53:48ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-11-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.01808212254What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability Bodil S. A. Karlsson0Carl Martin Allwood1University of GothenburgUniversity of GothenburgThe Dress photograph, first displayed on the internet in 2015, revealed stunning individual differences in color perception. The aim of this study was to investigate if lay-persons believed that the question about The Dress colors was answerable. Past research has found that optimism is related to judgments of how answerable knowledge questions with controversial answers are (Karlsson, Allwood & Buratti, 2016). Furthermore, familiarity with a question can create a feeling of knowing the answer (Reder & Ritter, 1992). Building on these findings, 186 participants saw the photo of The Dress and were asked about the correct answer to the question about The Dress’ colors (blue and black, white and gold, other, namely… or there is no correct answer). Choice of the alternative there is no correct answer was interpreted as believing the question was not answerable. This answer was chosen more often by optimists and by people who reported they had not seen The Dress before. We also found that among participants who had seen The Dress photo before, 19 %, perceived The Dress as white and gold but believed that the correct answer was blue and black. This, in analogy to previous findings about non-believed memories (Scoboria & Pascal, 2016), shows that people sometimes do not believe the colors they have perceived are correct. Our results suggest that individual differences related to optimism and previous experience may contribute to if the judgment of the individual perception of a photograph is enough to serve as a decision basis for valid conclusions about colors. Further research about color judgments under ambiguous circumstances could benefit from separating individual perceptual experience from beliefs about the correct answer to the color question. Including the option there is no correct answer may also be beneficial.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01808/fullColorJudgmentPerceptionBeliefoptimismAnswerability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bodil S. A. Karlsson
Carl Martin Allwood
spellingShingle Bodil S. A. Karlsson
Carl Martin Allwood
What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
Frontiers in Psychology
Color
Judgment
Perception
Belief
optimism
Answerability
author_facet Bodil S. A. Karlsson
Carl Martin Allwood
author_sort Bodil S. A. Karlsson
title What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
title_short What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
title_full What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
title_fullStr What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
title_full_unstemmed What is the Correct Answer About The Dress’ Colors?Investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
title_sort what is the correct answer about the dress’ colors?investigating the relation between optimism,previous experience and answerability
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-11-01
description The Dress photograph, first displayed on the internet in 2015, revealed stunning individual differences in color perception. The aim of this study was to investigate if lay-persons believed that the question about The Dress colors was answerable. Past research has found that optimism is related to judgments of how answerable knowledge questions with controversial answers are (Karlsson, Allwood & Buratti, 2016). Furthermore, familiarity with a question can create a feeling of knowing the answer (Reder & Ritter, 1992). Building on these findings, 186 participants saw the photo of The Dress and were asked about the correct answer to the question about The Dress’ colors (blue and black, white and gold, other, namely… or there is no correct answer). Choice of the alternative there is no correct answer was interpreted as believing the question was not answerable. This answer was chosen more often by optimists and by people who reported they had not seen The Dress before. We also found that among participants who had seen The Dress photo before, 19 %, perceived The Dress as white and gold but believed that the correct answer was blue and black. This, in analogy to previous findings about non-believed memories (Scoboria & Pascal, 2016), shows that people sometimes do not believe the colors they have perceived are correct. Our results suggest that individual differences related to optimism and previous experience may contribute to if the judgment of the individual perception of a photograph is enough to serve as a decision basis for valid conclusions about colors. Further research about color judgments under ambiguous circumstances could benefit from separating individual perceptual experience from beliefs about the correct answer to the color question. Including the option there is no correct answer may also be beneficial.
topic Color
Judgment
Perception
Belief
optimism
Answerability
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01808/full
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