Daily Mail

Why the silver generation love to wear bold colours

- EXCLUSIVE By Xantha Leatham Deputy Science Editor

WHETHER it’s Prue Leith, Helen Mirren or Mary Berry, older women often look fabulous wearing their favourite bold colours.

Now researcher­s have discovered that the reason some prefer brighter tones is because our perception of colour changes as we age.

By comparing how younger and older people’s eyes react to different hues, scientists found that colours effectivel­y fade as we age.

The team, from University College London, recruited 17 young adults with an average age of 28, and 20 older ones with an average age of 64. Participan­ts were placed in a blackout room and shown 26 different colours for five seconds each, while the researcher­s measured the diameter of their pupils.

These parts of the eye constrict in response to increases in colour lightness and intensity.

The colours participan­ts were shown included dark, muted, saturated and light shades of magenta, blue, green, yellow and red, alongside two shades of orange and four greys.

Using an eye-tracking camera, which recorded pupil diameter at 1,000 times per second, the team found that the pupils of healthy older people constricte­d less in response to colour intensity compared with young adults.

The findings, published in the journal Scientific Reports, revealed this was particular­ly marked with green and magenta.

Ms Berry, 88, sported a range of brightly coloured jackets on The

Great British Bake Off, wore a bright pink dress to meet the Prince and Princess of Wales, and has also posed in a bold red skirt.

Ms Leith, 83, appears to have worn almost every bright and bold colour under the sun, while Ms Mirren usually opts for a bold outfit for red carpet appearance­s. The 78-year- old even once dyed her hair blue to match her dress.

The study is the first to use pupillomet­ry to show that as we grow older, our brains become less sensitive to the intensity of colours in the world around us.

The findings also complement previous behavioura­l research showing that older adults perceive colours to be less colourful than young adults.

Dr Janneke van Leeuwen, the lead author of the study, said the work suggests that ‘colours slowly fade as we age’. She added: ‘Our findings might also help explain why our colour preference­s may alter as we age – and why at least some older people may prefer to dress in bold colours.’

‘Preference­s alter as we age’

 ?? ?? Bright: Prue Leith in vivid hues
Bright: Prue Leith in vivid hues

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