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  5. Gaze duration biases for colours in combination with dissonant and consonant sounds
 
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Gaze duration biases for colours in combination with dissonant and consonant sounds

Subtitle
A comparative eye-tracking study with orangutans
Publication date
2015
Document type
Research article
Author
Mühlenbeck, Cordelia
Liebal, Katja
Pritsch, Carla
Jacobsen, Thomas 
Organisational unit
Allgemeine und Biologische Psychologie 
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0139894
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/10588
Series or journal
PLOS ONE
Periodical volume
10
Periodical issue
10
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
  • Additional Information
Abstract
Research on colour preferences in humans and non-human primates suggests similar patterns of biases for and avoidance of specific colours, indicating that these colours are connected to a psychological reaction. Similarly, in the acoustic domain, approach reactions to consonant sounds (considered as positive) and avoidance reactions to dissonant sounds (considered as negative) have been found in human adults and children, and it has been demonstrated that non-human primates are able to discriminate between consonant and dissonant sounds. Yet it remains unclear whether the visual and acoustic approach–avoidance patterns remain consistent when both types of stimuli are combined, how they relate to and influence each other, and whether these are similar for humans and other primates. Therefore, to investigate whether gaze duration biases for colours are similar across primates and whether reactions to consonant and dissonant sounds cumulate with reactions to specific colours, we conducted an eye-tracking study in which we compared humans with one species of great apes, the orangutans. We presented four different colours either in isolation or in combination with consonant and dissonant sounds. We hypothesised that the viewing time for specific colours should be influenced by dissonant sounds and that previously existing avoidance behaviours with regard to colours should be intensified, reflecting their association with negative acoustic information. The results showed that the humans had constant gaze durations which were independent of the auditory stimulus, with a clear avoidance of yellow. In contrast, the orangutans did not show any clear gaze duration bias or avoidance of colours, and they were also not influenced by the auditory stimuli. In conclusion, our findings only partially support the previously identified pattern of biases for and avoidance of specific colours in humans and do not confirm such a pattern for orangutans.
Cite as
Enthalten in: PLOS ONE. - San Francisco, California, US : PLOS, 2006. - Online-Ressource . - Bd. 10.2015, 10 (14. Okt.), insges. 17 S.
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Published version
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