Drunk
Tank Pink is a shade of pink paint that psychologists used to use to paint the
inside of jail cells. And in the 1960s a group of psychologists went around
schools in Canada and they tried to find a color of paint that would pacify the
aggressive students or the badly behaved students and would also improve their
engagement in class.
So
they went and painted these school halls and these walls inside the school
classrooms a whole lot of different colors. Sometimes they painted them pink,
sometimes blue, sometimes yellow, and sometimes green. They had theories about
which colors would work best.
And ultimately they found according to their results that pink was the best
color. It had the greatest tendency to lead people to be calmer, the students
were more engaged. And so they wanted to do more work with this. If pink could
do that to students in a classroom they started to wonder whether it might also
be useful in the prison system. And a couple of naval officers who were at a
prison in Seattle said that they wanted to try this.
So
what they decided to do is to bring this pink paint to their prison and to
paint the inside of one of the jail cells bright pink. And so since people were
calling jail cells drunk tanks, they called it drunk tank pink. And what they
found was that the prisoners they put in there -- these were the worst
prisoners -- the most dangerous and the most aggressive prisoners. When they
were badly behaved they would put them inside this drunk tank pink cell for
about 15 minutes. And what they recorded was that over a nine month period
there wasn't a single aggressive or violent incident. And this gained a lot of
currency. People were very curious about it, about its other applications.
Football coaches from Division I schools started to wonder whether they could
paint the visiting locker rooms the same color to pacify their opponents.
No one
had any idea that pink would have such a striking effect on behavior. There are
a number of different explanations for the effect which is true of many of the
effects that I talk about in the book. It could be because we associate pink
with perhaps femininity and therefore these aggressive males tended to be a
little bit more reserved. It could be something about this color and how it
interacts with our physiology. And that's one of the arguments that the founder
of the color -- the guy who named the color makes. He suggests that there is
something about the way this color hits our eyes and interacts with our brains
that leads us to calmer. I'm not sure that I buy that 100 percent. I think the
better explanation is probably about our expectations and our associations when
we see the color pink. But that complexity, I think, is present in a lot of the
examples in the book.
Adam Alter
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