In many situations red is associated with hazard and danger. As a consequence, it was expected that task-irrelevant color cues in online environments would affect risk-Taking behaviors. This assumption was tested in two web-based experiments. The first study (N = 383) demonstrated that in risky choice dilemmas respondents preferred the less risky option when the displayed university logo was in red (versus gray); but only when both choice alternatives were at least moderately risky. The second study (N = 144) replicated these results with a behavioral outcome: Respondents showed more cautious behavior in a web-based game when the focal stimuli were colored red (versus blue). Together, these findings demonstrate that variations in the color design of a computerized environment affect risk taking: Red color leads to more conservative choices and behaviors.
CITATION STYLE
Gnambs, T., Appel, M., & Oeberst, A. (2015). Red color and risk-Taking behavior in online environments. PLoS ONE, 10(7). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0134033
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.