Even single words in isolation can evoke emotional reactions, but the mechanisms by which emotion is involved in automatic lexical processing are unclear. Previous studies using extremely similar materials and methods have yielded apparently incompatible patterns of results. In much previous work, however, words ’ emotional content is entangled with other non-emotional characteristics such as frequency of occurrence, familiarity and age of acquisition, all of which have potential consequences for lexical processing themselves. In the present study, the authors compare different models of emotion using the British Lexicon Project, a large-scale freely available lexical decision database. After controlling for the potentially confounding effe...
Behavioral and electrophysiological responses were monitored to 80 controlled sets of emotionally p...
Are word-level affect lexicons useful in detecting emotions at sentence level? Some prior research f...
It is widely accepted that the valence of a word (neutral, positive, or negative) influences lexical...
Even single words in isolation can evoke emotional reactions, but the mechanisms by which emotion is...
Emotional content of verbal material affects the speed of visual word recognition in various cogniti...
Recent research suggests that the allocation of attentional resources to emotional content during wo...
Emotional content of verbal material affects the speed of visual word recognition in various cogniti...
A degree of confusion currently exists regarding how the emotionality of a textual stimulus influenc...
Visual emotion word processing has been in the focus of recent psycholinguistic research. In general...
We examined the categorical nature of emotion word recognition. Positive, negative, and neutral word...
Reading is an important part of our daily life, and rapid responses to emotional words have received...
Kißler J, Herbert C. Emotion, Etmnooi, or Emitoon? - Faster lexical access to emotional than to neut...
Emotion words are generally characterized as possessing high arousal and extreme valence and have ty...
In the present study, we aimed to examine how the emotionality of words influences online sentence p...
We investigated whether emotions are activated during comprehension of emotion words. In the first p...
Behavioral and electrophysiological responses were monitored to 80 controlled sets of emotionally p...
Are word-level affect lexicons useful in detecting emotions at sentence level? Some prior research f...
It is widely accepted that the valence of a word (neutral, positive, or negative) influences lexical...
Even single words in isolation can evoke emotional reactions, but the mechanisms by which emotion is...
Emotional content of verbal material affects the speed of visual word recognition in various cogniti...
Recent research suggests that the allocation of attentional resources to emotional content during wo...
Emotional content of verbal material affects the speed of visual word recognition in various cogniti...
A degree of confusion currently exists regarding how the emotionality of a textual stimulus influenc...
Visual emotion word processing has been in the focus of recent psycholinguistic research. In general...
We examined the categorical nature of emotion word recognition. Positive, negative, and neutral word...
Reading is an important part of our daily life, and rapid responses to emotional words have received...
Kißler J, Herbert C. Emotion, Etmnooi, or Emitoon? - Faster lexical access to emotional than to neut...
Emotion words are generally characterized as possessing high arousal and extreme valence and have ty...
In the present study, we aimed to examine how the emotionality of words influences online sentence p...
We investigated whether emotions are activated during comprehension of emotion words. In the first p...
Behavioral and electrophysiological responses were monitored to 80 controlled sets of emotionally p...
Are word-level affect lexicons useful in detecting emotions at sentence level? Some prior research f...
It is widely accepted that the valence of a word (neutral, positive, or negative) influences lexical...