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Should I stay or should I go now? Empirical and real-life observations of the effect of uniform colour on inhibitory control. / Park, So Hyun; Lam, Wing-Kai; Uiga, Liis et al.
Yn: Journal of Cognitive Psychology, Cyfrol 35, Rhif 5, 04.07.2023, t. 571-577.

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Park, SH, Lam, W-K, Uiga, L, Cooke, A, Capio, C & Masters, R 2023, 'Should I stay or should I go now? Empirical and real-life observations of the effect of uniform colour on inhibitory control', Journal of Cognitive Psychology, cyfrol. 35, rhif 5, tt. 571-577. https://doi.org/10.1080/20445911.2023.2216916

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Park SH, Lam WK, Uiga L, Cooke A, Capio C, Masters R. Should I stay or should I go now? Empirical and real-life observations of the effect of uniform colour on inhibitory control. Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 2023 Gor 4;35(5):571-577. Epub 2023 Mai 28. doi: 10.1080/20445911.2023.2216916

Author

Park, So Hyun ; Lam, Wing-Kai ; Uiga, Liis et al. / Should I stay or should I go now? Empirical and real-life observations of the effect of uniform colour on inhibitory control. Yn: Journal of Cognitive Psychology. 2023 ; Cyfrol 35, Rhif 5. tt. 571-577.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Should I stay or should I go now? Empirical and real-life observations of the effect of uniform colour on inhibitory control

AU - Park, So Hyun

AU - Lam, Wing-Kai

AU - Uiga, Liis

AU - Cooke, Andrew

AU - Capio, Catherine

AU - Masters, Rich

PY - 2023/7/4

Y1 - 2023/7/4

N2 - We asked whether inhibitory control during sport is influenced by uniform colour. Participants were instructed to pass to the larger side of an opponent wearing red, green, or grey (control) uniforms, but not when that side was defended. Correct inhibition of responses was lower when opponents wore uniforms that were green compared to grey, but not red compared to grey, suggesting that perceiving green impaired inhibition. We therefore interrogated archival data to examine the association between green uniforms and intercepted passes–if green impairs an opponent’s inhibitory control, more ill-chosen passes should occur. Netball teams wearing predominantly green uniforms completed significantly more intercepts than teams wearing other-coloured (control) uniforms, suggesting that the colour of their uniform may have promoted a higher proportion of ill-chosen passes by opponents. Colour may influence inhibition in sport due to a colour-meaning association–green is “go”.

AB - We asked whether inhibitory control during sport is influenced by uniform colour. Participants were instructed to pass to the larger side of an opponent wearing red, green, or grey (control) uniforms, but not when that side was defended. Correct inhibition of responses was lower when opponents wore uniforms that were green compared to grey, but not red compared to grey, suggesting that perceiving green impaired inhibition. We therefore interrogated archival data to examine the association between green uniforms and intercepted passes–if green impairs an opponent’s inhibitory control, more ill-chosen passes should occur. Netball teams wearing predominantly green uniforms completed significantly more intercepts than teams wearing other-coloured (control) uniforms, suggesting that the colour of their uniform may have promoted a higher proportion of ill-chosen passes by opponents. Colour may influence inhibition in sport due to a colour-meaning association–green is “go”.

KW - Green

KW - uniform colour

KW - Go/NoGo task

KW - inhibition function

KW - basketball

KW - netball

U2 - 10.1080/20445911.2023.2216916

DO - 10.1080/20445911.2023.2216916

M3 - Article

VL - 35

SP - 571

EP - 577

JO - Journal of Cognitive Psychology

JF - Journal of Cognitive Psychology

SN - 2044-5911

IS - 5

ER -