The Asian Age

BIOLOGY DECIDES HOW WE CLASSIFY COLOURS: STUDY

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London, May 15: How we categorise colours is rooted in our biology and not in the language we speak, according to a new study. Researcher­s from University of Sussex in the UK analysed the response of 176 babies, aged between four and six months, to patches of colour.

Each baby was shown only one pair of different colours, with at least 10 babies tested for each pair. From the webcam recordings, researcher­s looked for a phenomenon known as novelty preference — babies will look longer at a ‘new’ colour if they perceive it to be different to a familiar one, researcher­s said. They found that babies have five colour categories: red, yellow, green, blue and purple.

The team then compared these colour categories to those found in English, and to 110 languages from non-industrial­ised countries, The Guardian reported.

They found that while different languages have different numbers of colour categories and different locations for the boundaries between them, the common categories aligned well with the babies’ categories. “The results suggest there is a biological origin to colour categories, which is later influenced by culture and environmen­t,” researcher­s said. “If you use a language that does not make a distinctio­n between green and blue, for example, then as they grow up babies and children learn to no longer make that distinctio­n,” said Alice Skelton, from University of Sussex.

The study was published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

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