Reenu Varghese’s research while affiliated with California State University, Fullerton and other places

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Publications (1)


Children's Emotional Associations with Colors
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 1994

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69,298 Reads

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357 Citations

The Journal of Genetic Psychology

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Reenu Varghese

In this study children's emotional associations with colors were investigated. Sixty children (30 girls, 30 boys), equally divided into groups of 5-year-olds and 6 1/2-year-olds, were asked their favorite color and were then shown nine different colors, one at a time and in a random order. For each color, children were asked, "How does (the color) make you feel?" All children were able to verbally express an emotional response to each color, and 69% of children's emotional responses were positive (e.g., happiness, excitement). Responses also demonstrated distinct color-emotion associations. Children had positive reactions to bright colors (e.g., pink, blue, red) and negative emotions for dark colors (e.g., brown, black, gray). Children's emotional reactions to bright colors became increasingly positive with age, and girls in particular showed a preference for brighter colors and a dislike for darker colors. Boys were more likely than girls were to have positive emotional associations with dark colors. Potential sources for children's color-emotion concepts, such as gender-related and idiosyncratic experiences, are discussed.

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Citations (1)


... Third, all participants in this experiment were Japanese, and the facial stimuli used were also Japanese models. Color preferences for emotion and facial color are known to vary across cultures, and the association between emotion and color is known to be developmentally variable (Boyatzis and Varghese, 1994;Han et al., 2018;Jonauskaite et al., 2020). Hence, it is appropriate to interpret the findings of this study as being based on phenomena observed under specific conditions, and their validity is limited within certain populations. ...

Reference:

Interaction between Facial Expression and Color in Modulating ERP P3
Children's Emotional Associations with Colors

The Journal of Genetic Psychology