doesn t have an impact on cognitive performance for emotional state. what about the results of the room temperature experiment. at $24.00 degrees celsius both groups were comfortably warm at $22.00 degrees most of them started to feel chilly and put on a sweater when the temperature dropped even more something unexpected happened for the. group in the cool blue light sweater wasn t enough for the test subjects and the one red like it was only 6 percent put on a jacket. for the subjects under the blue light it was 60 percent. so it would seem that when it comes to cool and warm light we do feel what we see. french forces and get imagine you re sitting in direct sunlight the color temperature will be more red and yellow. when you re sitting in the shade or under a cloudy sky the light will appear
20 degrees celsius. because stuff that s all examines whether the lighting influences the test subjects responses. i assume this experiment wouldn t show any influence at all why should the color of the lighting affect the way people perceive temperature. does a warm red light make us feel warmer than a cool blue light. at what temperature will the test subjects reach for a sweater or jacket. back to experiment and the question of how colors affect our emotional state there are 3 clear results. the majority of test subjects felt most comfortable with colors of medium intensity regardless of whether they read green or blue. highly saturated intense colors elicit the strongest physical response skin conductance increases showing that the test