Across various disciplines a number of methods have emerged that attempt to establish equivalence between various concepts that words in various languages point to. This study reports the results of a study that adopts a reference-based methodology which uses emotional situations to elicit emotion labels in four emotion categories (ANGER,SHAME,GUILT, and PRIDE). The similarities and differences in how five different lingual populations (English, German, French, Spanish, Russian) completed the task are assessed. The results are discussed in the light of differences in the lexicalization of specific emotion domains and cultural factors mediating the emotion-labelling process
It is argued that the linguistic representation of emotions and events giving rise to them is influe...
The present study investigates the concept of SHAME from a cross-linguistic and cross-cultural persp...
When we do not know how to correctly behave in a new context, the emotions that people familiar with...
Across various disciplines a number of methods have emerged that attempt to establish equivalence be...
The chapter overviews an expansive research area spanning together several disciplines in the affect...
In this chapter, I assess the degree to which emotions are biologically endowed or culturally constr...
Various traditions have investigated the relationship between emotion and language. For the basic em...
It is unclear whether emotion terms have the same meaning across cultures. Jackson et al. examined n...
Past studies show that different cultures/languages socialize speakers into different manners of int...
Various traditions have investigated the relationship between emotion and language. For the basic em...
This chapter explores the value of Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT) in the interdisciplinary study o...
Three studies tested the idea that people's cultural worlds are structured in ways that promote and ...
Recent research in linguistics singles out emotion words as different from other abstract words. The...
We propose that the comparison of semantic association networks may provide a novel, implicit approa...
This chapter explores the idea that the meanings of emotion words in typologically closer languages ...
It is argued that the linguistic representation of emotions and events giving rise to them is influe...
The present study investigates the concept of SHAME from a cross-linguistic and cross-cultural persp...
When we do not know how to correctly behave in a new context, the emotions that people familiar with...
Across various disciplines a number of methods have emerged that attempt to establish equivalence be...
The chapter overviews an expansive research area spanning together several disciplines in the affect...
In this chapter, I assess the degree to which emotions are biologically endowed or culturally constr...
Various traditions have investigated the relationship between emotion and language. For the basic em...
It is unclear whether emotion terms have the same meaning across cultures. Jackson et al. examined n...
Past studies show that different cultures/languages socialize speakers into different manners of int...
Various traditions have investigated the relationship between emotion and language. For the basic em...
This chapter explores the value of Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT) in the interdisciplinary study o...
Three studies tested the idea that people's cultural worlds are structured in ways that promote and ...
Recent research in linguistics singles out emotion words as different from other abstract words. The...
We propose that the comparison of semantic association networks may provide a novel, implicit approa...
This chapter explores the idea that the meanings of emotion words in typologically closer languages ...
It is argued that the linguistic representation of emotions and events giving rise to them is influe...
The present study investigates the concept of SHAME from a cross-linguistic and cross-cultural persp...
When we do not know how to correctly behave in a new context, the emotions that people familiar with...