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Emotional labeling is a cognitive process that involves identifying and naming one's emotions, such as anger, fear, happiness, or sadness. It allows individuals to recognize and express their internal emotional states, a critical aspect of emotional regulation and communication. Labeling emotions requires more than mere recognition; it also involves drawing upon memory and contextual cues to understand the current situation and apply a corresponding emotional label. For instance, feeling...
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Exploring the Use of Isolated Expressions and Film Clips to Evaluate Emotion Recognition by People with Traumatic Brain Injury
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Validation of Affective Sentences: Extending Beyond Basic Emotion Categories.

Barbra Zupan1, Michelle Eskritt2

  • 1Speech Pathology, College of Health Science, School of Health, Medical and Applied Sciences, Central Queensland University, Bruce Highway, North Rockhampton, QLD, 4702, Australia. b.zupan@cqu.edu.au.

Journal of Psycholinguistic Research
|August 11, 2022
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

This study validated sentences conveying emotions, finding 38 effectively represented 10 categories. This expands vocal emotion perception research beyond basic emotions.

Keywords:
EmotionSentencesValidationVerbal content

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Area of Science:

  • Psychology
  • Linguistics
  • Speech Science

Background:

  • Vocal emotion perception research often ignores verbal content.
  • Existing studies frequently use nonsense or emotionally neutral words.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To validate 95 sentences designed to convey 10 distinct emotions.
  • To create a resource for studying the interplay of verbal and nonverbal emotional cues.

Main Methods:

  • Two online studies involving 436 and 193 participants.
  • Participants selected the emotion best matching sentence content.
  • Simpson diversity index measured response variability.

Main Results:

  • 38 sentences were successfully validated across 10 emotion categories.
  • Low diversity in participant responses indicated clear emotional meaning.
  • Validated sentences provide reliable verbal emotion stimuli.

Conclusions:

  • Validated sentences enhance research on vocal emotion perception.
  • Crucial for studies examining verbal content and emotional tone interaction.
  • Supports research into nuanced emotional distinctions.