TY - JOUR
T1 - Does Children’s Colour Use Reflect the Emotional Content of their Drawings?
AU - Macleod, Emily
AU - Gross, Julien
AU - Patterson, Tess
AU - Hayne, Harlene
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - When children draw in clinical contexts, clinicians sometimes rely on children's colour use to make inferences about their emotional reaction to the subject of the drawing. Here, we examined whether children use colour to portray emotion in their drawings. In Experiment 1, children indicated their colour preferences and then coloured in outlines of figures characterized as nasty or nice. Children also drew complex, multi-coloured pictures about their own happy or sad experiences. In Experiment 2, hospitalized children drew about being worried or scared in hospital and about their positive experiences. In both experiments, we examined the relation between children's colour use and their colour preferences. Three- to 10-year-old children used more preferred colours to colour in the nice outline. Although they were more likely to use non-preferred colours to colour in the nasty outline, they tended to used a mix of preferred and non-preferred colours. When both normal and hospitalized children produced drawings about positive and negative events, there was no relation between children's colour choices and their colour preferences; children primarily used preferred colours. These data suggest that clinicians should exercise extreme caution when interpreting the meaning of colour in children's drawings. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
AB - When children draw in clinical contexts, clinicians sometimes rely on children's colour use to make inferences about their emotional reaction to the subject of the drawing. Here, we examined whether children use colour to portray emotion in their drawings. In Experiment 1, children indicated their colour preferences and then coloured in outlines of figures characterized as nasty or nice. Children also drew complex, multi-coloured pictures about their own happy or sad experiences. In Experiment 2, hospitalized children drew about being worried or scared in hospital and about their positive experiences. In both experiments, we examined the relation between children's colour use and their colour preferences. Three- to 10-year-old children used more preferred colours to colour in the nice outline. Although they were more likely to use non-preferred colours to colour in the nasty outline, they tended to used a mix of preferred and non-preferred colours. When both normal and hospitalized children produced drawings about positive and negative events, there was no relation between children's colour choices and their colour preferences; children primarily used preferred colours. These data suggest that clinicians should exercise extreme caution when interpreting the meaning of colour in children's drawings. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
M3 - Article
VL - 21
SP - 198
EP - 215
JO - Infant and Child Development
JF - Infant and Child Development
ER -