The aim of a computer-aided drawing therapy system in this work is to associate drawings which a client makes with the client's mental state in quantitative terms. A case study is conducted on experimental data which contain both pastel drawings and mental state scores obtained from the same client in a psychotherapy program. To perform such association through colors, we translate a drawing to a color feature by measuring its representative colors as
primary
color
rates. A
primary
color
rate of a color is defined from a psychological
primary
color
in a way such that it shows a rate of emotional properties of the psychological
primary
color
which is supposed to affect the color. To obtain several informative colors as representative ones of a drawing, we define two kinds of color: approximate colors extracted by color reduction, and area-averaged colors calculated from the approximate colors. A color analysis method for extracting representative colors from each drawing in a drawing sequence under the same conditions is presented. To estimate how closely a color feature is associated with a concurrent mental state, we propose a method of utilizing machine-learning classification. A practical way of building a classification model through training and validation on a very small dataset is presented. The classification accuracy reached by the model is considered as the degree of association of the color feature with the mental state scores given in the dataset. Experiments were carried out on given clinical data. Several kinds of color feature were compared in terms of the association with the same mental state. As a result, we found out a good color feature with the highest degree of association. Also,
primary
color
rates proved more effective in representing colors in psychological terms than RGB components. The experimentals provide evidence that colors can be associated quantitatively with states of human mind.
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