Data Sheet 2_Adjectives improve color perception in visually impaired people through multi
by Ching-Yi Wang·Updated 19d ago
20.5 KB1files
Available on 1 platform
Sign in to view source links and access this dataset
Description
Six participants were interviewed to describe nine colors based on tactile, olfactory, auditory, and emotional cues, and fifteen participants completed a follow-up questionnaire. The study by Ching-Yi Wang, published on figshare, found preferences for black, green, yellow, and red, and categorized elicited adjectives into emotional, taste, appearance, time, and abstract types.
Use Cases
Analyze cross-sensory associations for color concepts based on the described multisensory stimulation.
Study language and adjective generation in visually impaired populations based on the interview methodology.
Explore the effectiveness of auditory stimuli for eliciting emotional adjectives as indicated by the results.
Investigate color preference patterns among visually impaired individuals based on the reported preferences for black, green, yellow, and red.
Strengths
The study involved semi-structured interviews with six participants and a follow-up questionnaire with fifteen participants.
The research investigated nine specific colors (red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, white, gray, and black).
Data is openly available under a CC-BY-4.0 license.
Limitations
The dataset is a 20.5 KB DOCX file; its scope is limited to qualitative interview and questionnaire results.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Provenance
Source
Ching-Yi Wang
Collection Method
Semi-structured interviews and a follow-up questionnaire.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-05-18 05:31:13; freshness should be verified.
Data is provided as a DOCX document, not a structured data file.