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[VIDEO] The Taste of Color

The colors in our environment make a major impact on how our food tastes! And it doesn't end there. Trace shows how a bit of color can influence our lives.

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A color-coded map of the world’s most and least emotional countries

A color-coded map of the world’s most and least emotional countries | Science News | Scoop.it
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Goethe on the Psychology of Color and Emotion

Goethe on the Psychology of Color and Emotion | Science News | Scoop.it

Color is an essential part of how we experience the world, both biologically and culturally. One of the earliest formal explorations of color theory came from an unlikely source — the German poet, artist, and politician Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who in 1810 published Theory of Colours (public library; public domain), his treatise on the nature, function, and psychology of colors.

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Cyborg makes art using seventh sense

Cyborg makes art using seventh sense | Science News | Scoop.it

Neil Harbisson can only see shades of grey. So his prosthetic eyepiece, which he calls an “eyeborg”, interprets the colours for him and translates them into sound. Harbisson’s art sounds like a kind of inverse synaesthesia. But where synaesthetes experience numbers or letters as colours or even “taste” words, for example, Harbisson’s art is down to a precise transposition of colour into sound frequencies. As a result, he is able to create facial portraits purely out of sound, and he can tell you that the colour of Mozart’s music is mostly yellow. Liz Else caught up with him at the TEDGlobal conference.

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Seeing Black and White Makes People More Judgmental

Seeing Black and White Makes People More Judgmental | Science News | Scoop.it

Black-and-white judgments may be more literal than you might expect. A new study finds that people who view information on a black-and-white background are less likely to see gray areas in moral dilemmas than those who get the information alongside other colors.

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How we see color (video)

View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-we-see-color-colm-kelleher There are three types of color receptors in your eye: red, green and blue. But how...
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His And Hers Colors – Popular Color Names By Gender Preference

His And Hers Colors – Popular Color Names By Gender Preference | Science News | Scoop.it
lauren west's comment, September 9, 2013 7:11 PM
This article was about how male and females differ in naming colors. Females tend to have a lot more names for colors than men do. It also seems as if men like to name colors gross names(ie crap, mucus, baby vomit) and women seemed to give colors much more pleasant names (dusty teal, Barbie pink, peacock blue). This data shows that men tend to generalize colors more than women. It does not really give a reason for why this happens.
lauren west's comment, September 9, 2013 7:15 PM
This article was a lot shorter that I expected it to be. I wish it had went into more detail and given a reason for why men and women differ. However, I did like the interactivness of it. Going through and reading the names of some of the colors was interesting.
Emma Gaines's comment, April 27, 2017 9:49 PM
This article is about how males and females have different ways of naming different colors. Females tend to have a lot more colors on their spectrum and like to be more specific whereas a male would see any shade of read and just think red. Boys also tend to name colors more putrid names and girls tend to name them softer more pleasant names. I liked this article very much I thought it was extremely interesting and I never thought about it before but now I realize how true it really is
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Color Plays Musical Chairs In the Brain

Color Plays Musical Chairs In the Brain | Science News | Scoop.it

But Noë's more interested in color as an ecological property -- a feature of the way light and surfaces interact. Like Goethë, he believes that color is fluid, changing, open to interpretation. We think of it as stable, but it's not. It can look one way under one light, one way under another, different when you turn it different ways or notice a new highlight. By his estimation, "It’s not... intrinsic to the surface of the leaf that it is green. It's greenness is in the way it behaves in relation to lighting."

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The crayola-fication of the world: How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains (part II)

The crayola-fication of the world: How we gave colors names, and it messed with our brains (part II) | Science News | Scoop.it

American linguist Benjamin Whorf, suggested that our language determines how we perceive the world. Different cultures with independent histories often end up with the same colors in their vocabulary. Of course, the word that they use for red might be quite different – red, rouge, laal, whatever. Yet the concept of redness, that vivid region of the visual spectrum that we associate with fire, strawberries, blood or ketchup, is something that most cultures share. 

Source: http://goo.gl/y4Ozx


Part 1: http://goo.gl/3TghN


Articles about COLOR: http://www.scoop.it/t/science-news?tag=color


Via Andrea Graziano
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How Colors Get Their Names: It's in Our Vision

How Colors Get Their Names: It's in Our Vision | Science News | Scoop.it
The order in which colors are named worldwide appears to be due to how eyes work, suggest computer simulations with virtual people.
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