DocumentCode :
141249
Title :
The effects of perceiving color in living environment on QEEG, Oxygen saturation, pulse rate, and emotion regulation in humans
Author :
Sroykham, W. ; Wongsathikun, Jatuporn ; Wongsawat, Y.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Mahidol Univ., Nakornpathom, Thailand
fYear :
2014
fDate :
26-30 Aug. 2014
Firstpage :
6226
Lastpage :
6229
Abstract :
Light and color have been shown to have substantial physical, psychological and sociological effects on humans. Hence, an investigation on the effect of changes in light and color to the biological signals is a challenging problem. Five participants were measured the oxygen saturation (SpO2), pulse rate, and quantitative electroencephalogram (QEEG) in six colors (white, blue, green, yellow, red and black) of living environment for 5 minutes per color. Then all participants were asked to answer the emotional questionnaire of BRUMS and color performance for each color environment. The results showed brain activity of high beta wave (25-30 Hz) that associated with alertness, agitation, mental activity, and general activation of mind and body functions (at frontal lobes and temporal lobes) in red and yellow colored rooms were higher than blue, green, white and black colored rooms, respectively. It also had the relationship with the psychological effect (BRUMS). The amplitude asymmetry of beta wave (12-25 Hz) was highly attenuated in warm color (red and yellow colored rooms), moderately attenuated in cool color (green and blue colored room) and little attenuated in white and black colored rooms. The BRUMS showed that red and yellow yielded significant effect on anger (F=4.966, p=0.002) and confusion (F=3.853, p=0.008). Red and green color yielded high effect on vigor. Green color did not affect the depression. Blue color yielded moderate effect on confusion, tension and fatigue. White and black colors yielded low effect on any mood, but black color had no effect on vigor. In addition, we cannot observe any significant changes of pulse rate and blood oxygen saturation in each color. The results can possibly be used as the recommendation to design the room for either normal people or patients.
Keywords :
bio-optics; biological effects of optical radiation; blood; cognition; colour vision; electroencephalography; indoor environment; oximetry; oxygen; psychology; BRUMS emotional questionnaire; O2; agitation mood; alertness mood; anger mood; beta wave amplitude asymmetry attenuation; biological signals; black living environment effect; blood oxygen saturation changes; blue living environment effect; body functions; brain activity; color environment; color perception effects; color performance; confusion mood; cool color effect; depression mood; fatigue mood; frequency 12 Hz to 25 Hz; frequency 25 Hz to 30 Hz; frontal lobe; general mind activation; green living environment effect; human QEEG; human emotion regulation; human pulse rate measurement; light effect; living environment color perception; mental activity; oxygen saturation measurement; physical effects; psychological effects; pulse rate changes; quantitative electroencephalogram; red living environment effect; room color; room design; sociological effects; temporal lobe; tension mood; time 5 min; vigor mood; warm color effect; white living environment effect; yellow living environment effect; Brain; Color; Fatigue; Green products; Image color analysis; Mood;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
ISSN :
1557-170X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6945051
Filename :
6945051
Link To Document :
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