When shopping for baby gifts, everyone knows that blue is for boys
and pink is for girls. But now there's evidence that those colors may be more
than just marketing gimmicks. According to a new study in the Aug. 21 issue of Current Biology, women may be biologically
programmed to prefer the color pink or, at least, redder shades of blue more
than men. Anya Hurlbert and Yazhu Ling, neuroscientists at Newcastle University
conducted a color-selection experiment with 208 volunteers between the ages of
20 and 26. Participants were asked to move a mouse cursor as quickly as
possible to their preferred color from a series of paired, colored rectangles,
controlled for hue, saturation and lightness. Each person completed three
separate tests, and then was retested two weeks later. On average, the study
found, all people generally prefer blue, something researchers have long known.
The study also found that while both men and women liked blue, women tended to
pick redder shades of blue reddish-purple hues while men preferred blue-green.
To assess whether the color preferences could have been due to culture, the
researchers tested 37 Han Chinese volunteers from mainland China, along with
the 171 British Caucasian participants, and found the same male-female
differences. Though the Chinese participants showed a greater overall
preference for red than their British counterparts (red is considered an
auspicious color in China), Chinese women and men diverged in color preference
predictably along the red-green axis.” This is the first study to pinpoint a
robust sex difference in the red-green axis of human color vision,” says Yazhu
Ling, co-author of the study. “And this preference has an evolutionary
advantage behind it.”Ling speculates that the color preference and women's ability
to better discriminate red from green could have evolved due to sex-specific
divisions of labor: while men hunted, women gatherered, and they had to be able
to spot ripe berries and fruits. Another theory suggests that women, as
caregivers who need to be particularly sensitive to, say, a child flushed with
fever, have developed a sensitivity to reddish changes in skin color, a skill
that enhances their abilities as the “emphathizer.”Ling says that she and her
colleagues plan to expand their research in future studies to other cultures not
only British and Chinese and age groups, including infants, to further test the
nature-versus-nurture concept.

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