University of Cambridge.
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.
Child Dev. 2021 Jul;92(4):1574-1589. doi: 10.1111/cdev.13528. Epub 2021 Jan 21.
Preferences for pink and blue were tested in children aged 4-11 years in three small-scale societies: Shipibo villages in the Peruvian Amazon, kastom villages in the highlands of Tanna Island, Vanuatu, and BaYaka foragers in the northern Republic of Congo; and compared to children from an Australian global city (total N = 232). No sex differences were found in preference for pink in any of the three societies not influenced by global culture (ds - 0.31-0.23), in contrast to a female preference for pink in the global city (d = 1.24). Results suggest that the pairing of female and pink is a cultural phenomenon and is not driven by an essential preference for pink in girls.
研究人员在秘鲁亚马逊地区的希皮博村落、瓦努阿图塔纳岛高地的卡斯特姆村落和刚果共和国北部的巴雅卡狩猎采集部落中,对 4 至 11 岁的儿童进行了粉色和蓝色偏好测试,并与来自澳大利亚国际大都市的儿童进行了比较(总人数为 232 人)。在这三个未受全球文化影响的社会中,无论男孩还是女孩,对粉色的偏好都没有性别差异(ds 值为-0.31 至-0.23),而在受全球文化影响的大都市中,女孩更喜欢粉色(d 值为 1.24)。研究结果表明,将女性与粉色联系起来是一种文化现象,并不是女孩天生就更喜欢粉色。