The influence of word concreteness on acquired positive emotion association: An event-related potential study

被引:1
|
作者
Jin, Yan [1 ]
Ma, Yue [2 ]
Li, Miner [3 ,4 ]
Zheng, Xifu [5 ]
机构
[1] Huizhou Univ, Sch Educ Sci, Huizhou 516007, Peoples R China
[2] Huizhou Univ, Sch Foreign Languages, Huizhou 516007, Peoples R China
[3] Jiangmen 9 Middle Sch, Jiangmen 529000, Peoples R China
[4] South China Normal Univ, Coll Vocat & Tech Educ, Foshan 528225, Peoples R China
[5] South China Normal Univ, Sch Psychol, Guangzhou 510631, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Concreteness; Acquisition; Positive emotion; Pseudowords; Attention; Event -related potentials; ABSTRACT WORDS; ERP; VALENCE; ACQUISITION; INFORMATION; RESPONSES; NOUNS;
D O I
10.1016/j.actpsy.2023.104052
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The ability to acquire positive emotions from words is essential to psychological well-being. How word concreteness affects the process of positive emotion acquisition remains unknown. Here, using an evaluation conditioning paradigm, participants learned the association between pseudowords and concrete/abstract and positive/neutral words. Behavior and event-related potential data were recorded while participants performed emotional recognition tasks. Behavioral results showed that, for neutral words, concrete words were more accurate than abstract words, whereas for positive words, abstract words were more accurate than concrete words. Moreover, N1 and P2 amplitudes in the pseudowords were modulated by interacting word emotion and concreteness. Specifically, pseudowords associated with neutral concrete words elicited larger N1 and P2 amplitudes than pseudowords associated with neutral abstract words. Conversely, N1 and P2 amplitudes in pseudowords associated with positive abstract words were not significant compared to those in positive concrete words. Additionally, an emotional effect was observed when pseudowords were associated with abstract words, showing higher P3 amplitude for the pseudowords associated with positive abstract words than neutral abstract words. No significant effects were found for the pseudowords associated with positive abstract or concrete words. These findings suggest that association learning may influence the early attention processing of emotion acquisition from words, and emotional information of positive abstract words might boost positive emotion acquisition, thereby eliminating the acquisition advantage from positive concrete words.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Exploring Affective Priming Effect of Emotion-Label Words and Emotion-Laden Words: An Event-Related Potential Study
    Wu, Chenggang
    Zhang, Juan
    Yuan, Zhen
    BRAIN SCIENCES, 2021, 11 (05)
  • [22] Affective picture processing is modulated by emotion word type in masked priming paradigm: an event-related potential study
    Wu, Chenggang
    Zhang, Juan
    Yuan, Zhen
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 32 (03) : 287 - 297
  • [23] The influence of contour fragmentation on recognition memory: An event-related potential study
    Brodeur, Mathieu B.
    Debruille, J. Bruno
    Renoult, Louis
    Prevost, Marie
    Dionne-Dostie, Emmanuelle
    Buchy, Lisa
    Lepage, Martin
    BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2011, 76 (01) : 115 - 122
  • [24] Influence of aggregated ratings on purchase decisions: an event-related potential study
    Shen, Yongchao
    Shan, Wei
    Luan, Jing
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 2018, 52 (1-2) : 147 - 158
  • [25] Direction effects in number word comparison: an event-related potential study
    Kaan, E
    NEUROREPORT, 2005, 16 (16) : 1853 - 1856
  • [26] Acquired affective associations induce emotion effects in word recognition: An ERP study
    Fritsch, Nathalie
    Kuchinke, Lars
    BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2013, 124 (01) : 75 - 83
  • [27] EFFECTS OF INTERITEM LAG ON WORD REPETITION - AN EVENT-RELATED POTENTIAL STUDY
    KARAYANIDIS, F
    ANDREWS, S
    WARD, PB
    MCCONAGHY, N
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1991, 28 (03) : 307 - 318
  • [28] Effect of the concreteness of robot motion visual stimulus on an event-related potential-based brain-computer interface
    Li, Mengfan
    Yang, Guang
    Li, Hongchao
    NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 2020, 720
  • [29] The hole story: an event-related potential study with trypophobic stimuli
    Wabnegger, Albert
    Schwab, Daniela
    Schienle, Anne
    MOTIVATION AND EMOTION, 2019, 43 (06) : 985 - 992
  • [30] POSITIVE EMOTION UPREGULATION IS RESISTANT TO CONCURRENT WORKING MEMORY LOAD: AN EVENT-RELATED POTENTIAL STUDY OF REAPPRAISAL AND SAVORING
    Cheng, Yuhan
    Peters, Blaine
    MacNamara, Annmarie
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2022, 59 : S51 - S51