Color task
Color tasks are tasks that involve the recognition of colors. Color tasks can be classified according to how the color is interpreted. Cole describes four categories of color tasks:
- Comparative – When multiple colors must be compared, such as with mixing paint
- Connotative – When colors are given an implicit meaning, such as red = stop
- Denotative – When identifying colors, for example by name, such as “where is the yellow ball?”
- Aesthetic – When colors look nice – or convey an emotional response – but don’t carry explicit meaning
Color blindness
is a defect of normal color vision. Because color blindness is a symptom of several genetic and acquired conditions, the severity can range drastically from monochromacy to anomalous trichromacy. Congenital color blindness causes difficulty in all four kinds of color tasks. However, cerebral color blindness may cause issues only in some types of color tasks, and other conditions that do not affect color vision can still affect color vision tasks.Comparative
Comparative color tasks require a subject to differentiate two colors. Simple examples include many color vision tests, which are specifically modeled as comparative tasks. For example, the Ishihara test and other pseudoisochromatic plates require a direct comparison of foreground and background colors to be able to read the embedded number/character.Arrangement tests such as the Farnsworth D-15 also requires comparison of adjacent colors to be able to arrange them in a meaningful spectrum. In addition to being able to distinguish two colors, arrangement tests also require measuring color difference and decision making based on this parameter. Despite the increased complexity of this task, they were not differentiated by Cole, though were by others.
Comparative tasks are the "purest" tasks that rely almost solely on color perception without interference of linguistics, culture or memory. Sometimes, color blindness derived from brain damage can affect the other color tasks while leaving the comparative color tasks untouched.
Other examples of comparative color tasks include:
- Distinguishing red fruits from green foliage
- Paint mixing
- Reading colored data with legends
- Painting/drawing realistic subjects
Connotative
An example of a connotative color task based on cultural meaning are traffic lights, which require the test taker to not only recognize the color, but also to interpret the meaning of the color. Examples of connotative color tasks based on natural meaning are interpretation of skin tone and interpretation of food edibility.