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"Colours are lights suffering and joy"
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That was a quote from the Theory of Colours, published back in 1810 by Goethe, a German
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writer. He wrote about how colours are perceived by humans, how they make us think and feel.
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"Red conveys an impression of gravity and dignity, and at the same time of grace and
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attractiveness." "The appearance of blue is gloomy and melancholy." "Yellow carries with
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it the nature of brightness, and has a serene, softly exciting character."
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Goethe's definition of colour by our experience of it was dismissed by the scientific community,
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physicists like Newton knew colour was wavelengths of visible light.
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But Goethe's colour wheel is beautiful in it's simplicity and in it's recognition of
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how our environment affects our psychological states.
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Let's fast forward 200 or so years. In somewhere like Times Square, vibrant, plentiful colour
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is just part of the landscape. Our use of colour has evolved from the realm of artists
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to the art of persuasion.
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Colour plays a huge role in recognising brands, advertisements and creating the store environments
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that influence our purchases so much.
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Research shows red creates a sense of urgency, it increases our heart rate and leads to spontaneous
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purchases. Blue is calm, cool and leads us to be more well-considered in our spending.
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Researchers found a correlation between pleasant emotions and the wavelength of a colour, so
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people felt more pleasant when they were exposed to short wavelength colours, like blue.
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One study even looked at how blue and red influence our shopping behaviour. Two stores
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were constructed, one with a red colour scheme and one with a blue colour scheme. Participants
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were given some money and the task of buying a TV. It was found there were longer browsing
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times and more purchases in the blue store.
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Another study found that shoppers are 15% more likely to return to a store with blue
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color schemes than those with orange color schemes.
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But these studies just group colours and effects together. What about brightness and saturation,
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the intensity of a colour? And of course there's more than colour involved, there's influences
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like smell, music, temperature and salespeople.
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Atmospherics is the conscious designing of space, including all of those things, to create
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specific effects in buyers... really the effect of buy, buy, buy and come back soon to buy
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more. Supermarkets, for example, consider the height of shelving, the intensity of lights
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and the style of floors to try and create a rustic, marketplace feel, so you're comfortable.
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And buy more.
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As more and more people now shop online, atmospherics and the art of persuasion are evolving into
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more of a science. Researchers are monitoring the brain activity of their participants while
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they're browsing and shopping online.
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One study used fMRI and showed subjects a number of potential products, like different
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types of chocolate. They found the activation in a certain brain area (NAcc), normally associated
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with reward processing, was positively correlated with their decision to buy the product.
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There are lots of factors in an online environment that lead to the activation of this area,
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and your purchase. Some factors you tend to notice, like design cues such as where the
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text is placed on the screen. Studies have shown that text placed to the right of the
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item can have more influence on someone buying it than text placed on the left side. But
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ambient cues, like music and colour, are thought to be processed subconsciously.
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Another study showed that a couch sold twice as well when a furniture website had a blue
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background than when it had a green one. Researchers said perhaps the green background reminded
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people of money and made them more reserved, where the blue triggered a relaxed state of
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mind.
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This may all seem trivial, but colour has been shown to influence our mood, behaviour
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and what we buy, whether it's in store or online. And 200 (or so) years after Goethe
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we're still asking questions about just how colour affects emotion.
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Back in the 1800s he said "We shall not be surprised to find that colour's effects are
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immediately associated with the emotions of the mind."
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It's just a few years too late for Goethe to be tickled pink with some supporting evidence.
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If you haven't already, subscribe to BrainCraft! I have a new episode out every other week.