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🎨 Color Science Module

Understanding the psychology and perception of color

The Stroop Effect

Discovered by John Ridley Stroop in 1935, this phenomenon demonstrates how our brain processes conflicting information.

Try it: When you see the word "RED" written in blue ink, your brain experiences interference between reading the word and identifying the color. This cognitive conflict slows your reaction time.

Why Does This Happen?

💡 Fun Fact: The Stroop Effect is used in clinical psychology to assess cognitive flexibility and attention control.

Color Perception

Humans can distinguish approximately 10 million different colors, but our perception is influenced by context, lighting, and individual differences.

The RGB Color Model

RED
255,0,0
GREEN
0,255,0
BLUE
0,0,255

Digital displays use combinations of Red, Green, and Blue light to create all visible colors. Each channel ranges from 0-255, giving us 16.7 million possible colors.

Example: Purple (128,0,128) combines red and blue at half intensity

Color Psychology

Colors trigger emotional and psychological responses that vary by culture and personal experience.

Common Associations

💡 Did You Know? Color perception can be affected by color blindness, affecting ~8% of men and ~0.5% of women.

Training Your Color Perception

Using interactive color tools can improve your ability to distinguish subtle differences and process visual information faster.

Benefits of Color Training

Practice Tip: Start with high-contrast colors and gradually work toward similar shades to progressively challenge your perception.

The Science of Difficulty

Our interactive learning tools use scientific principles to create progressive challenges:

Color Similarity

The closer two colors are in RGB space, the harder they are to distinguish. Easy mode uses high contrast (RGB difference > 100), while expert mode uses subtle variations (RGB difference < 30).

Cognitive Load

Adding time pressure, multiple stimuli, or conflicting information increases cognitive load, making tasks more challenging and improving mental agility with practice.

💡 Research Shows: Regular cognitive challenges can improve reaction time, working memory, and executive function.
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