TY - JOUR
T1 - Placing joy, surprise and sadness in space
T2 - a cross-linguistic study
AU - Marmolejo-Ramos, Fernando
AU - Correa, Juan C.
AU - Sakarkar, Gopal
AU - Ngo, Giang
AU - Ruiz-Fernández, Susana
AU - Butcher, Natalie
AU - Yamada, Yuki
N1 - Funding Information:
FM-R thanks Iryna Losyeva and Alexandra Marmolejo-Losyeva (La Patulya) for helping with the data entry, Rosie Gronthos for proofreading the manuscript, Jorge I. Vélez for his advice on statistical graphics, and Kimihiro Noguchi, Petar Milin and Luis Benites for providing feedback on the statistical procedures. SR-F thanks Jennifer Müller and Sergio Cervera for helping with the data collection. FM-R was supported by Grants EDU2013-46437-R from the Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO) of Spain and 2012V/PUNED/0009 from the UNED. YY was supported by Kyushu University Interdisciplinary Programs in Education and Projects in Research Development (27822) and JSPS KAKENHI (15H05709).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016, The Author(s).
PY - 2017/7/1
Y1 - 2017/7/1
N2 - The valence–space metaphor posits that emotion concepts map onto vertical space such that positive concepts are in upper locations and negative in lower locations. Whilst previous studies have demonstrated this pattern for positive and negative emotions e.g. ‘joy’ and ‘sadness’, the spatial location of neutral emotions, e.g. ‘surprise’, has not been investigated, and little is known about the effect of linguistic background. In this study, we first characterised the emotions joy, surprise and sadness via ratings of their concreteness, imageability, context availability and valence before examining the allocation of these emotions in vertical space. Participants from six linguistic groups completed either a rating task used to characterise the emotions or a word allocation task to implicitly assess where these emotions are positioned in vertical space. Our findings suggest that, across languages, gender, handedness, and ages, positive emotions are located in upper spatial locations and negative emotions in lower spatial locations. In addition, we found that the neutral emotional valence of surprise is reflected in this emotion being mapped mid-way between upper and lower locations onto the vertical plane. This novel finding indicates that the location of a concept on the vertical plane mimics the concept’s degree of emotional valence.
AB - The valence–space metaphor posits that emotion concepts map onto vertical space such that positive concepts are in upper locations and negative in lower locations. Whilst previous studies have demonstrated this pattern for positive and negative emotions e.g. ‘joy’ and ‘sadness’, the spatial location of neutral emotions, e.g. ‘surprise’, has not been investigated, and little is known about the effect of linguistic background. In this study, we first characterised the emotions joy, surprise and sadness via ratings of their concreteness, imageability, context availability and valence before examining the allocation of these emotions in vertical space. Participants from six linguistic groups completed either a rating task used to characterise the emotions or a word allocation task to implicitly assess where these emotions are positioned in vertical space. Our findings suggest that, across languages, gender, handedness, and ages, positive emotions are located in upper spatial locations and negative emotions in lower spatial locations. In addition, we found that the neutral emotional valence of surprise is reflected in this emotion being mapped mid-way between upper and lower locations onto the vertical plane. This novel finding indicates that the location of a concept on the vertical plane mimics the concept’s degree of emotional valence.
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U2 - 10.1007/s00426-016-0787-9
DO - 10.1007/s00426-016-0787-9
M3 - Article
C2 - 27431389
AN - SCOPUS:84978744008
SN - 0340-0727
VL - 81
SP - 750
EP - 763
JO - Psychologische Forschung
JF - Psychologische Forschung
IS - 4
ER -