Awe is theorized as an emotion appraised by perceived vastness and need for accommodation. This theoretical framework was developed with a review of spatially and temporally distributed literature mostly in the American and European cultural context, and is assumed to be culturally universal. However, awe as described by Japanese literature, was not explicitly included in the original theorization. We tested whether this framework generalized to the Japanese context by analyzing how Japanese awe-related words (e.g., “畏敬/ikei”) are used in Japanese text. A topic model was used to extract topics in contexts as an index of meaning. Results show that (1) the meaning of awe was statistically dissociable from similar but distinct meanings of fear...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Vastness and accommodation underlie the prototypical experience of awe. Guided by this analysis, in ...
This study focused on two similar but potentially distinctive emotions, awe and being moved. Althoug...
This article investigates typical usage patterns of the word awe in the English language and how it ...
Experiences that contradict one's core concepts (e.g. of the world, people, the self) elicit intense...
Awe is a complex emotion arising from the perception of literal or figurative vastness. Several subj...
Feelings of fear as well as feelings of respect are language-specific. They occasionally occur separ...
What is the cognitive structure of emotions related to sonkei (a feeling of respect)? This study exa...
The study aims at examining the concept of “happiness” and its manifestations in Japanese and Englis...
International audienceAwe seems to be a complex emotion or emotional construct characterized by a mi...
What is the cognitive structure of emotions related to sonkei (a feeling of respect)? This study exa...
Hara simply means belly, but for Japanese people it means more than physical. Hara is a concept, an ...
If you've hiked among giant sequoias, stood in front of the Taj Mahal, or observed a particularly vi...
This capstone seeks to further what is known about the complex emotion of awe. In most studies on aw...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Vastness and accommodation underlie the prototypical experience of awe. Guided by this analysis, in ...
This study focused on two similar but potentially distinctive emotions, awe and being moved. Althoug...
This article investigates typical usage patterns of the word awe in the English language and how it ...
Experiences that contradict one's core concepts (e.g. of the world, people, the self) elicit intense...
Awe is a complex emotion arising from the perception of literal or figurative vastness. Several subj...
Feelings of fear as well as feelings of respect are language-specific. They occasionally occur separ...
What is the cognitive structure of emotions related to sonkei (a feeling of respect)? This study exa...
The study aims at examining the concept of “happiness” and its manifestations in Japanese and Englis...
International audienceAwe seems to be a complex emotion or emotional construct characterized by a mi...
What is the cognitive structure of emotions related to sonkei (a feeling of respect)? This study exa...
Hara simply means belly, but for Japanese people it means more than physical. Hara is a concept, an ...
If you've hiked among giant sequoias, stood in front of the Taj Mahal, or observed a particularly vi...
This capstone seeks to further what is known about the complex emotion of awe. In most studies on aw...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Awe is a complex emotion composed of an appraisal of vastness and a need for accommodation. The purp...
Vastness and accommodation underlie the prototypical experience of awe. Guided by this analysis, in ...