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Title: | The sun is no fun without rain: Physical environments affect how we feel about yellow across 55 countries | Authors: | Jonauskaite, Domicele Abdel-Khalek, Ahmed M. Abu-Akel, Ahmad SaudAl-Rasheed, Abdulrahman Antonietti, Jean-Philippe Ásgeirsson, Árni Gunnar Atitsogbe, Kokou Amenyona Barmaf, Marodégueba Barrattg, Daniel Bogushevskayah, Victoria Mezianei, Bouayed Maliha Khadidja Chamseddinej, Amer Charernboomk, Thammanard Chkonial, Eka Ciobanua, Teofil Coronamn, Violeta Allison, Creed(艾莉森 克里德) Daelap, Nele Daoukq, Hassan Dimitrovar, Nevena Doorenboss, Cornelis B. Fominst, Sergejs Fonseca-Pedrerou, Eduardo Gasparv, Augusta Gizdic, Alena Griber, Yulia A. Grimshaw, Gina M. Hasan, Aya Ahmed Havelka, Jelena Hirnstein, Marco Karlsson, Bodil S.A. Kim, Jejoong Konstantinoua, Nikos Marjaana, Lindeman Manav, Banu Marquardt, Lynn Mefoh, Philip Mroczko-Wąsowicza, Aleksandra Mutandwa, Phillip Ngabolo, Georgette Oberfeld, Daniel Papadatou-Pastou, Marietta Perchtold, Corinna M. NiloufarPouyan, AliciaPérez-Albénizu Soron, Tanjir Rashid Roinishvili, Maya Romanyuk, Lyudmyla Montejo, AlejandroSalgado Sultanova, Aygun Tau, Ramiro Uusküla, Mari Vainio, Suvi Vargas-Soto, Veronica Volkan, Eliz Wąsowicz, Grażyna Zdravković, Sunčica Zhang, Meng Mohr, Christine |
Keywords: | Colour Emotion Affect Cross-cultural Environment Climate |
Issue Date: | 2019 | Publisher: | Academic Press | Series/Report no.: | Journal of Environmental Psychology;Vol.66 ; No.101350 | Abstract: | Across cultures, people associate colours with emotions. Here, we test the hypothesis that one driver of this cross-modal correspondence is the physical environment we live in. We focus on a prime example – the association of yellow with joy, – which conceivably arises because yellow is reminiscent of life-sustaining sunshine and pleasant weather. If so, this association should be especially strong in countries where sunny weather is a rare occurrence. We analysed yellow-joy associations of 6625 participants from 55 countries to investigate how yellow-joy associations varied geographically, climatologically, and seasonally. We assessed the distance to the equator, sunshine, precipitation, and daytime hours. Consistent with our hypotheses, participants who live further away from the equator and in rainier countries are more likely to associate yellow with joy. We did not find associations with seasonal variations. Our findings support a role for the physical environment in shaping the affective meaning of colour. | URI: | https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0272494419303469 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/4347 |
ISSN: | 1522-9610 |
Appears in Collections: | Research Papers |
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mutandwa.pdf | Abstract | 105.42 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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