The field of lighting design for a long time and has worked in the Australian lighting team "The Flaming Beacon" for more than ten years. She said from her own experience that in the field of lighting designers, women are the majority, but most of the senior executives phone database are still male. The latest issue of the journal Biology of Sex Differences states, "Men need slightly longer wavelengths than women to experience the same hue in most of the visible spectrum, since longer wavelengths are associated with 'warmer' wavelengths. Colors are correlated, for example, orange may look redder to women than men.
Likewise, grass is almost always greener to women than men, to whom verdant objects look a little yellow.” In addition, the study says the visual findings support the so-called hunter-gatherer hypothesis, which states that the sexes evolved different mental abilities to suit their prehistoric roles. Men "show significantly higher sensitivity to fine details and fast-moving stimuli". John Barbur, professor of optics and visual sciences at City University of London, pointed out that women are generally worse than men in terms of color sensitivity, but when it comes to subtle differences between shades of color, women do tend to stand out.
Therefore, under the premise that men and women have many different visual judgments and aesthetic perceptions, can the industry allow the “feminine” thinking to have room to enter the dialogue among the mainstream positive thinking of “light hegemony”? He took the city of Rennes in France as an example. The entire urban form provided an opportunity for the development of lighting principles, bringing darkness into the city and adjusting the lighting according to the needs of night activities. It was the first realization of dark infrastructure in France. . The so-called concept of "bringing darkness into the city"