How first- and second-language emotion words influence emotion perception in Swedish–English bilinguals

IF 2.5 1区 文学 Q1 LINGUISTICS
Marie-France Champoux-Larsson, Erik C. Nook
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Emotional experiences are often dulled in one's second language. We tested whether emotion concepts are more strongly associated with first language (L1) than second language (L2) emotion words. Participants (140 L1-Swedish–L2-English bilinguals) saw a facial expression of an emotion (cue) followed by a target, which could either be another facial expression, an L1 emotion word, or an L2 emotion word. Participants indicated whether the cue and target represented the same or different emotions as fast as possible. Participants were faster and more accurate in both the L1 and L2 word conditions compared to the face condition. However, no significant differences emerged between the L1 and L2 word conditions, suggesting that emotion concepts are not more strongly associated with L1 than L2 emotion words. These results replicate prior research showing that L1 emotion words speed facial emotion perception and provide initial evidence that words (not only first language words) shape emotion perception.
第一语言和第二语言情绪词如何影响瑞典语-英语双语者的情绪感知
情感体验在第二语言中往往会变得迟钝。我们测试了情感概念与第一语言(L1)情感词的关联是否比第二语言(L2)情感词的关联更强。参与者(140 名第一语言-瑞典语-第二语言-英语的双语者)看到一个情绪的面部表情(线索),然后是一个目标,目标可以是另一个面部表情、一个第一语言情绪词或一个第二语言情绪词。受试者以最快的速度指出提示语和目标语代表的情绪是相同还是不同。与面部条件相比,L1 和 L2 单词条件下参与者的速度更快、更准确。然而,L1 和 L2 单词条件之间并没有出现明显的差异,这表明情绪概念与 L1 情绪单词的关联并不比 L2 情绪单词更强。这些结果重复了之前的研究,表明L1情绪词能加速面部情绪感知,并提供了词汇(不仅是第一语言词汇)影响情绪感知的初步证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
16.70%
发文量
86
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