1 / 2

Glasgow Language Processing

Glasgow Language Processing. Emotion Word Processing: Evidence From Eye Movements.

atira
Download Presentation

Glasgow Language Processing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Glasgow Language Processing Emotion Word Processing: Evidence From Eye Movements crucify betray industry owlavenuefestive astonished cheerblackmailhostagebus history stovehard intercourse bravetrauma sinful beesdrownstomach wine alert passion casinocockroachinsult passage column aloof dollar Christmas sexyslaughterconfusedprivacyyellow exercise couple admiredshark surgery rejected skull errand umbrella happy life partyenraged disgust cancer rapeforkmanner win promotion lovepressure war angerelbowbarrel progress desire car intimateaccident firekillersalad slush curtains nude fireworks eroticevil pain controlling radiator kettlemiracle treasure inspiredweapon divorce panic bland violinjoke valentine reunionassault surgery tumour alley sentiment aroused ecstasy glorymutilate hurricane thief elevator prairie rescue laughter flirt Graham G. Scott, Patrick J. O’Donnell, & Sara C. Sereno University of Glasgow • Introduction • Only 2 studies thus far have investigated the interaction of the emotionality and frequency of a word: • Nakic, et al (2006) carried out an LDT using a 2x3 design which compared frequency (high and low) and word type (‘high’ negative, ‘low’ negative, and neutral). Main effects of frequency and emotion were observed, but there was no interaction. • Highly negative words were responded to fastest, then low negative words, then neutral words. • Scott et al (2006) carried out an LDT using a 3x2 design to investigate emotion (positive, negative, neutral) and frequency (high, low) and found an interaction: • There were significant frequency effects within each word type. Within LF words, positive and negative words were responded to faster than neutral words. Within HF words, positive words were responded to faster than negative or neutral words. • The Present Study • Aims to reproduce the pattern of results of Scott et al (2006) in a naturalistc reading context by placing high and low frequency positive, negative and neutral words into neutral sentences and measuring eye-movements. Results (cont.) • Method (cont.) • Materials and Design • 2 x 3 within-subject design: Frequency (LF,HF) x Word Type (Pos, Neut, Neg). Word type was defined by valence and arousal ratings: • Positive: high arousal, high valence, e.g., riches, honest. • Neutral: low arousal, medium valence, e.g., violin, modest. • Negative: high arousal, low valence, e.g., tumour, violent. • Frequency values were obtained from the British National Corpus. Emotional arousal and valence ratings were taken from Affective Norms of English Words (ANEW) database (Bradley & Lang, 1999). • 15 words of each type (90 total), matched for frequency, length, no. of syllables, and word type. • 30 sentence tripples and words tripples. Subjects split into 3 groups, each subject saw each target word in only one sentence. • Words: KissNews Bomb • Sentence 1:Phoebe discussed the _____ at great length with her friends. • Sentence 2: Michelle dreamt about the _____ every night for weeks. • Sentence 3: Tom delivered the _____ with great care and attention. • Discussion • Significant Frequency x Word Type interactions occurred in first fixation, single fixation, and gaze duration measures. • Results seem to favour a perceptual defence based theory, such as Taylor’s (1991) Mobilisation-Minimisation hypothesis: • For LF words, high arousal words (both positive and negative) are processed more easily than neutral words. • For HF positive words, high arousal levels facilitate processing without any cost incurred from their highly activated (HF) positive valence. • For HF negative words, initial processing facilitation is offset by the disruptive effects of highly activated (HF) negative valence. • These data suggest that an early identification of the emotional tone of words leads to differential processing. Specifically, HF negative words seem to attract additional cognitive resources. • This is consistent with a time-line in which emotional quality either accompanies or precedes (but does not follow) lexical access (Taylor & Fragopanogos, 2005). • More stuff Results Method Participants 59 native English speakers with normal vision who were not diagnosed as dyslexic. Apparatus Fourward Technologies Generation 5.5 dual-Purkinje eyetracker. Procedure Participants read short passages of text (comprising 2 sentences) while their eye movements were monitored. Y/N comprehension questions were presented on half the trials. Materials and Design References and Acknowledgements Bradley, M.M., & Lang, P.J. (1999). Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW). The NIMH Center for the Study of Emotion and Attention, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL. British National Corpus (1995). http://www.natcorp.ox.ac.uk. Nakic (2006) The impact of affect and frequency on lexical decision: The role of the amygdala and inferior frontal cortex. Neuroimage, 31(4), 1752-1761. Scott, G.G.; O’Donnell, P.J., Leuthold, H.; and Sereno, S.C. (2006) Emotion word processing: behavioural and electrophysiological evidence, poster presented at AmLAP 2006, Nijmegen, The Netherlands. Taylor, S.E. (1991). Asymmetrical effects of positive and negative events: The mobilization-minimization hypothesis. Psychological Bulletin, 110, 67-85. Taylor, J.G., & Fragopanagos, N.F. (2005). The interaction of attention and emotion. Neural Networks, 18, 353-369. This work was conducted as partial fulfilment of a PhD at the Univ of Glasgow for G.G. Scott, funded by an ESRC postgraduate fellowship. Corresponding author: g.scott@psy.gla.ac.uk.

  2. Glasgow Language Processing Emotion Word Processing: Evidence From Eye Movements crucify betray industry owlavenuefestive astonished cheerblackmailhostagebus history stovehard intercourse bravetrauma sinful beesdrownstomach wine alert passion casinocockroachinsult passage column aloof dollar christmas sexyslaughterconfusedprivacyyellow exercise couple admiredshark surgery rejected skull errand umbrella happy life partyenraged disgust cancer rapeforkmanner win promotion lovepressure war angerelbowbarrel progress desire car intimateaccident firekillersalad slush curtains nude fireworks eroticevil pain controlling radiator kettlemiracle treasure inspiredweapon divorce panic bland violinjoke valentine reunionassault surgery tumour alley sentiment aroused ecstasy glorymutilate hurricane thief elevator prairie rescue laughter flirtblackmail rude limber locker dazzlerollercoasterathleticsdespisedemon toxic hydrant mantel thrill infatuation heart Graham G. Scott, Patrick J. O’Donnell, & Sara C. Sereno University of Glasgow

More Related