Just my opinion (of which everyone knows I have a lot of lol), but lure action, size, shape and tail design matter most with color finishing last (unless it's the wrong color of course of which there aren't too many.) That's to say that if the four lure characteristics are right, you can count on a small group of colors to do just fine, enhancing what a fish sees.
A lot to digest, but simply stated: go smaller, retrieve slower and at the depth fish might be. Your lure is your ultimate fish finder and gives you a picture of what they'll bite that day. Favorites will evolve, but one other thing to remember is water color and sun brightness.
When a fish looks at a lure that just caught its attention, that attention is riveted - longer for vertical presentations and less for horizontal retrieves. If a fish is easy to motivate into biting, it will follow and possibly bite multiple times horizontal-to- bottom retrieves. When under float, off bottom or mid-depth, fish are teased by slight lure actions enhanced by color - which is not what you or I or a fish sees depending on time of day, cloud cover, water color and depth fished.
Recently I found that a green color that almost matched an algae green water color didn't contrast enough for fish to see. It's like wearing a light gray outfit in a fog. I changed to pumpkin (green or brown) and started doing better. Even pearl wasn't doing it unless part of a laminate (two tone) with olive green. This color combo has done well in algae-dying waters I recently fished:
This one also did well in the same waters due to contrast with the sky and underwater background:
as did this brighter color in the same design:
No one has the answer to your question which only you will discover over time. Not hue only, but lighter darker or somewhere in between is number one. Look through the many posts for examples of the color variety many of the fine anglers on crappie.com have posted which proves - Color is in the Eye of the Beholder. JMHO