Research published in the Journal of Consumer Psychology shows that the more intense the lighting, the greater a person's emotions
-- both positive and negative.
"Other evidence shows that on sunny days people
are more optimistic about the stock market, report higher wellbeing and are
more helpful while extended exposure to dark, gloomy days can result in
seasonal affective disorder," study researcher Alison Jing Xu, an
assistant professor of management at the University of Toronto Scarborough,
said in a statement.
White lights with blue color cast are cold lights,
the psychological effect that we see in a bright
room with these LED
lights, gives us the feeling
of being in a cold place.
"Contrary to these results, we found that on sunny
days depression-prone people actually become more depressed."
The study included six experiments to examine the
link between emotion and ambient brightness. For one experiment, researchers
showed that feelings of warmth increased in response to bright light, even when
the temperature of the room was kept the same.
In the other experiments, researchers put study
participants under different lighting conditions as they rated various things,
such as the attractiveness of someone, the spiciness of a sauce, and their
feelings toward positive or negative words.
When the study participants were under the brighter
lighting, their emotions were more intense: For instance, they wanted the
spicier sauce, they thought the person was more attractive, and they thought the positive words were more "positive" and
the negative words were more "negative."
Researchers noted that the bright light's ability to
make people feel warmer could have something to do with increasing the
intensity of their emotions.
"We suggest that these effects arise because
light underlies perception of heat, and perception of heat can trigger the hot emotional
system," the study said.
"Thus, turning down the light, effortless
and unassuming as it may seem, can reduce emotionality in everyday decisions,
most of which take place under bright light."



No comments:
Post a Comment