Color blindness and semantic knowledge: Cognition of color terms from elicited lists in dichromats and normal observers

Author:

Moreira Humberto12ORCID,Álvaro Leticia3ORCID,Lillo Julio1

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Psicología Social, del Trabajo y Diferencial Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid Spain

2. División de Psicología C.E.S. Cardenal Cisneros Madrid Spain

3. Departamento de Psicología Experimental Procesos Cognitivos y Logopedia, Facultad de Psicología, Universidad Complutense de Madrid Madrid Spain

Abstract

AbstractColor blindness (color vision deficiency) affects ~8% of males and ~ 0.4% females worldwide. Here we use the elicited lists method to investigate their semantic knowledge regarding “basic color terms” and their relationships. Lists were obtained from color vision deficient and normal observers. 32 dichromats (15 protanopes, 17 deuteranopes) and 32 normal trichromats (17 females, 15 males) diagnosed by a battery of color tests (Ishihara, City University Test, anomaloscope) wrote monolexemic lists of colors. Psychological salience of terms (ln(CSI)), adjacency between pairs of terms (ADJ; MDS) and the presence of clusters of terms defined on the basis of the Universals and evolution hypothesis were analyzed. All four groups of participants showed the same semantic memory structure: lists started with the cardinal primaries cluster (blue, red, yellow, green), followed by the achromatic primaries cluster (black and white), or the derived cluster (brown, orange, violet, pink, purple, and gray). After the clusters (cardinals, achromatics, and derived), a highly variable number of non‐basic terms appeared. This number was higher in normal trichromats. Non‐basic terms were not part of any cognitive cluster. The similarity in the lists of trichromats and dichromats suggest that both may acquire similar semantic knowledge about color terms. Several potential explanations are considered.

Funder

Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad

Publisher

Wiley

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