error
Die ETH-Bibliothek ist vom Mi., 24.12.2025 bis So., 04.01.2026 geschlossen. Während dieser Zeit können weiterhin neue Einträge in der Research Collection eingereicht werden. Ab Mo., 05.01.2026 sind wir gerne wieder für Sie da. // The ETH Library will be closed from Wednesday, December 24, 2025, to Sunday, January 4, 2026. During this time, new publications can still be submitted to the Research Collection. We will be happy to assist you again starting Monday, January 5, 2026.
 

Effects of environmental colours in virtual reality: Physiological arousal affected by lightness and hue


Loading...

Date

2023-10

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

Altmetric

Data

Abstract

It is a popular belief that colours impact one's psychological and affective functioning. However, clear-cut scientific evidence is still lacking, largely due to methodological challenges. Virtual reality (VR) enabled us to control and modify the environment. We exposed 60 participants to red or blue environments varying in lightness and saturation. We assessed participants' physiological responses (i.e. arousal) with heart rate and skin conductance measures, and their self-reported levels of valence and arousal in response to the coloured environments. The results revealed physiological effects of lightness and hue. When compared with the baseline measures, heart rate increased, and heart rate variability decreased more in the dark than the medium lightness rooms. Both measures signalled higher arousal in the darker room, irrespective of hue. Also, when compared with the baseline measures, skin conductance increased more in the red than the blue rooms, again signalling higher arousal in the red condition. The difference between the red and the blue conditions was detectable only on some saturation and lightness combinations. We conclude that being immersed in environments of different colours can change physiological arousal. However, not all changes are driven by hue and not all the effects are measurable on all physiological parameters.

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

10 (10)

Pages / Article No.

230432

Publisher

Royal Society

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

virtual reality; colour; affect; emotion; arousal; physiological measures

Organisational unit

03963 - Wenderoth, Nicole / Wenderoth, Nicole check_circle

Notes

Funding

Related publications and datasets