The Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW; Bradley & Lang, 1999) scale is a widely used instrument for valence and arousal response in English. A person whose first language is American Sign Language (ASL) might process the English emotion words differently. We hypothesized that ASL users might provide different valence and arousal ratings for emotion words in ASL, and a separate normative database might be necessary for this population. Forty-two Deaf adult signers completed ratings for the English and ASL conditions. Results showed that the rating for the arousal were similar for both conditions. However, the valence ratings were different, which could be explained by the different word frequency among the ASL users. This raises a need ...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Emotional load assessment of the written words has gained considerable interest in psycholinguistics...
Human beings can judge emotional states of a voice only by listening, no matter thay understand the ...
The Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW; Bradley & Lang, 1999) scale is a widely used instrument...
Given the importance of lexical frequency for psycholinguistic research and the lack of comprehensiv...
Human ratings of valence, arousal, and dominance are frequently used to study the cognitive mechanis...
Investigates the influences of emotional valence and arousal on word recognition in language
Information about the affective meanings of words is used by researchers working on emotions and moo...
This work investigates the ability of deaf subjects to correctly label foreign emotional faces of ha...
This study investigated the impact of language modality and age of acquisition on semantic fluency i...
A range of factors predicting variation in American Sign Language (ASL) have been suggested in the l...
<p>Two major semantic features of emotion concepts have been shown to impact performance in<br> emot...
Affective stimuli are increasingly used in emotion research. Typically, stimuli are selected from da...
Language-and culture-specific norms are needed for research on emotion-laden stimuli. We present val...
Background and Objectives. Emotion words are mostly characterized along the classic dimensions of ar...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Emotional load assessment of the written words has gained considerable interest in psycholinguistics...
Human beings can judge emotional states of a voice only by listening, no matter thay understand the ...
The Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW; Bradley & Lang, 1999) scale is a widely used instrument...
Given the importance of lexical frequency for psycholinguistic research and the lack of comprehensiv...
Human ratings of valence, arousal, and dominance are frequently used to study the cognitive mechanis...
Investigates the influences of emotional valence and arousal on word recognition in language
Information about the affective meanings of words is used by researchers working on emotions and moo...
This work investigates the ability of deaf subjects to correctly label foreign emotional faces of ha...
This study investigated the impact of language modality and age of acquisition on semantic fluency i...
A range of factors predicting variation in American Sign Language (ASL) have been suggested in the l...
<p>Two major semantic features of emotion concepts have been shown to impact performance in<br> emot...
Affective stimuli are increasingly used in emotion research. Typically, stimuli are selected from da...
Language-and culture-specific norms are needed for research on emotion-laden stimuli. We present val...
Background and Objectives. Emotion words are mostly characterized along the classic dimensions of ar...
Nearly 400 million people worldwide speak English as a second language (ESL), yet little research ha...
Emotional load assessment of the written words has gained considerable interest in psycholinguistics...
Human beings can judge emotional states of a voice only by listening, no matter thay understand the ...