Surely
you've done it before. You see a small baby and, based on the color of the
baby's blanket, decide whether it's a boy or a girl. It's common knowledge that
pink is for girls and blue is for boys. But have you ever wondered why? Why is
it that boys prefer blue and girls pink? Is it a cultural phenomenon, as many
assume? Or does this distinction between color preferences occur on a different
level?
This
question is exactly what two neuroscientists working at Newcastle University in
Great Britain seek to answer. Doctors Anya Hurlbert and Yazhu Ling created an
experiment concerning color preferences among men and women.
The journal Current Biology published their findings in the Aug. 21, 2007,
issue.
The
researchers assembled 206 test subjects of both sexes between the ages of 20
and 26 for the study. Most were British Caucasians, but 37 were of Chinese
ancestry and were raised in China. The subjects sat before a computer while two rectangles of different
colors flashed on the screen. For the purpose of the study, the neuroscientists
divided the color spectrum into two halves, red-green and blue-yellow. The
rectangles were sorted into these two categories.
The
researchers asked participants to quickly choose which rectangle they
preferred, and then the computer moved on to another set of rectangles. The
findings from the experiment showed that men and women both preferred blue out
of this set of basic colors.
When
given mixed colors to choose from, the male population of the study showed a
wide preference for color blends. But when the women were asked to choose from
mixed colors, they tended to prefer colors that moved away from blue and toward
the red end of the spectrum, where shades like pinks and lilacs are found. The
scientists concluded that the long-held distinction of color preferences among
genders had a real basis.
But
why? Couldn't these results be due to the participants being raised in a
culture where blue is for boys and pink for girls? In other words, couldn't the
color preferences be learned rather than innate --
something we're born with?
That's
where the Chinese participants came in. To show the pink/blue color preference
exists across cultures and is therefore not a cultural construct, the
researchers gave the same test to Chinese subjects. The results were similar
among the Chinese women and the British women: Both preferred the shades found
on the red side of the spectrum.
This
lends support to the notion that color preferences among the sexes have a
biological basis rather than a cultural one. The researchers hope to support
this conclusion with a revised version of the test modified for infants. A very
young child, the scientists reason, hasn't yet had a chance to be socialized
into a gender role by society. Therefore, any color preferences displayed by
babies would have to be innate.
But
the question remains -- why is there a distinction among males and females
regarding color preferences? Doctors Hurlbert and Ling suggest that the reason
is found in humanity's distant past. Read the next page to find out how the
origins of our color preferences might be found on the African savannah.
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