Color-Form Attitudes of Deaf Children

Abstract
A test of color-form attitude was administered to 95 deaf children and 90 hearing children ranging in age from 8 to 12 years, and also to 32 hearing nursery school children and 33 hearing adults. Deaf children show a greater tendency to differentiate visual stimuli on the basis of color. Males tend to make more color responses than do females. There was no change in the distribution of color-form attitudes between the nursery school children and the adult group.