That Viral Color Test Won’t Reveal Your Personality — But Color Really Does Mess With Your Mind
You’ve seen the quiz. “The first color you notice reveals how intimidating you are.” Millions tap, share, and tag a friend.
Psychologists have an answer for those quizzes. It’s just not the one the quizzes promise.
These tests flood Facebook feeds constantly. They claim that noticing gray means poise, purple means creativity, yellow means overwhelming optimism. None of them cite a study. None of them name a scientist.
Real scientists, it turns out, have been studying color and the mind for more than a century. And their findings are stranger — and more interesting — than any quiz.
What 42,000 People in 64 Countries Revealed
Researchers Domicele Jonauskaite and Christine Mohr of the University of Lausanne reviewed 132 peer-reviewed studies spanning 1895 to 2022, covering 42,266 participants from 64 countries. ResearchGate
The pattern was remarkably consistent. People reliably link yellow with joy, black with sadness, light colors with positive feelings and dark colors with negative ones. ResearchGate
An earlier study by the same team tested 4,598 people across 30 nations speaking 22 different languages. The color-emotion associations proved largely universal, with similarity scores averaging .88 — though nations that were linguistically or geographically closer matched each other even more. Sage Journals
That universality shows up in everyday speech. English speakers “see red” or “feel blue.” French speakers have “a blue fear.” German speakers “turn yellow with envy.” Different languages, same instinct. Psychology Today
So Why Do Scientists Reject the Quizzes?
Because association is not personality.
Yes, most humans connect yellow with happiness. That tells you something about humanity — not about the individual staring at a word-search graphic on their phone.
As Jonauskaite and Mohr put it, popular websites and even professionally used personality tests claim favorite colors reveal who you are. Scientific evidence contradicts them. Psychology Today
Which color “catches your eye first” in a viral image depends on the image’s design, your screen brightness, and where your gaze happens to land. It does not measure poise, creativity, or how intimidating you are.
The researchers add an honest caveat about their own field, too: most studies measure abstract associations, and it remains to be seen whether colors actually change the emotions people experience in specific situations. ResearchGate
What We Know
Color-emotion links are real and largely universal, confirmed across 30 nations and 22 languages. Sage Journals
Yellow tracks with joy, black with sadness, light with positive, dark with negative across 128 years of research. ResearchGateResearchGate
No peer-reviewed evidence supports “first color you see” personality tests.
Researchers state directly that scientific evidence contradicts color-based personality claims. Psychology Today
Why This Matters
Americans encounter these quizzes by the millions, and they’re a gateway to something bigger: getting comfortable with pseudoscience dressed up as insight. The same engagement machinery that sells a harmless color quiz also sells fake health cures and bogus “tests” for serious conditions. Knowing the difference between real psychology and a content farm’s guesswork is a basic survival skill in a 2026 news feed.
The irony? The truth is more shareable than the myth. Strangers in Nigeria, China, and Nebraska feel the same thing when they see yellow.
Color can’t tell you who you are. But it just proved how alike we all are — and no quiz ever managed that.