Blue–seven phenomenon
The blue–seven phenomenon is a social phenomenon in which a purported statistical majority of people in the US choose the color blue and number seven when asked to randomly select a color and a single digit number. The cause of the cognitive bias is not understood,[1][2][3][4] though it has been posited that both colors and numbers are imbued with layers of significance.[5]
The existence of the phenomenon has been disputed.[6][7] Outside of the US these preferences may not hold.[8][9] In other countries, differences occur, particularly in Northern Ireland where a noted bias of green and eight results in a green–eight phenomenon.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Benel, Russell A. (January 1976). "The "Blue–Seven Phenomenon" or the "Blue, Seven, … Phenomena"?". The Journal of General Psychology. 94 (1): 145–146. doi:10.1080/00221309.1976.9711600.
- ^ Saito, Miho (October 1999). ""Blue and Seven Phenomena" among Japanese Students". Perceptual and Motor Skills. 89 (2): 532–536. doi:10.2466/pms.1999.89.2.532.
- ^ Richard C Boutwell; Patrice Fennell (Oct 1, 1974). "Investigation and theoretical consideration of the "blue–seven" phenomenon". The Journal of General Psychology. 91: 301–302.
- ^ Simon, William E. (October 1971). "Number and Color Responses of Some College Students: Preliminary Evidence for a "Blue Seven Phenomenon"". Perceptual and Motor Skills. 33 (2): 373–374. doi:10.2466/pms.1971.33.2.373.
- ^ Christenfeld, Nicholas (Jan 1995). "Choices from Identical Options". Psychological Science. 6 (1): 50–55. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.1995.tb00304.x. JSTOR 40062876.
- ^ Trueman, John (July 1979). "Existence and Robustness of the Blue and Seven Phenomena". The Journal of General Psychology. 101 (1): 23–26. doi:10.1080/00221309.1979.9920057.
- ^ Knowles, Philip L. (October 1977). "The "Blue Seven" is Not a Phenomenon". Perceptual and Motor Skills. 45 (2): 648–650. doi:10.2466/pms.1977.45.2.648.
- ^ Wiegersma, Sjoerd; Van Der Elst, Gerard (February 1988). ""Blue Phenomenon": Spontaneity or Preference?". Perceptual and Motor Skills. 66 (1): 308–310. doi:10.2466/pms.1988.66.1.308.
- ^ Letzter, Rafi (Aug 12, 2016). "Billions of people have the same favorite color and number, and scientists don't know why". Business Insider.
- v
- t
- e
- Acquiescence
- Ambiguity
- Affinity
- Anchoring
- Attentional
- Attribution
- Actor–observer
- Correspondence
- Authority
- Automation
- Availability
- Mean world
- Belief
- Blind spot
- Choice-supportive
- Commitment
- Confirmation
- Compassion fade
- Congruence
- Cultural
- Declinism
- Distinction
- Dunning–Kruger
- Egocentric
- Emotional
- Extrinsic incentives
- Fading affect
- Framing
- Frequency
- Frog pond effect
- Halo effect
- Hindsight
- Horn effect
- Hostile attribution
- Impact
- Implicit
- In-group
- Illusion of transparency
- Mean world syndrome
- Mere-exposure effect
- Narrative
- Negativity
- Normalcy
- Omission
- Optimism
- Out-group homogeneity
- Outcome
- Overton window
- Precision
- Present
- Pro-innovation
- Proximity
- Response
- Restraint
- Self-serving
- Social comparison
- Social influence bias
- Spotlight
- Status quo
- Substitution
- Time-saving
- Trait ascription
- Turkey illusion
- von Restorff effect
- Zero-risk
- In animals
- Cognitive bias mitigation
- Debiasing
- Heuristics in judgment and decision-making
This social philosophy-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e
This mathematics-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e