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Friday, May 17, 2013

Color Red Linked to High Testosterone

Posted on 6:18 AM by Unknown
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Psych Central News





Color Red Linked to High Testosterone



Color Red Linked to High Testosterone A new study suggests that the choice of red clothing in athletic completion may be linked to high levels of testosterone.


Psychological scientist Daniel Farrelly of the University of Sunderland and colleagues recruited 73 men to participate in the study. Participants were unaware of the study’s aims.


The men were told that they would be performing a competitive task and that their performances would be placed on a leaderboard.


The participants then chose either a red or blue symbol to represent them in the table and completed the competitive tasks. They also answered questionnaires aimed at gauging whether various personal reasons may have affected their color choice.


Researchers found that males who chose red as their color in a competitive task had higher testosterone levels than other males who chose blue.


“The research shows that there is something special about the color red in competition, and that it is associated with our underlying biological systems,” Farrelly said.


The researchers believe that the link may explain why many sports stars wear red clothing — Tiger Woods, for example, famously chooses to wear a red shirt on the last day of a major competition.


Choosing to wear red “may, unconsciously, signal something about their competitive nature, and it may well be something that affects how their opponents respond,” Farrelly explains.


The study will be published in Psychological Science.


To determine participants’ testosterone levels, the researchers took saliva samples at the start of the study, before the participants knew about the competitive task, and again at the end.


The data revealed that men who chose red had higher baseline testosterone levels, and they rated their color as having higher levels of characteristics such as dominance and aggression, than men who chose blue.


Color choice did not, however, seem to be related to actual performance in the competitive task.


The researchers believe that direct competition, in which opponents can be seen wearing red or appearing red, may be necessary for the red advantage to occur.


Along these lines, previous research has shown that wearing red can be advantageous through its influence on opponents’ perceptions, leading them to view red competitors as being “high quality” competitors.


Source: Association of Psychological Science





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