Lee Chang H, Park Jongmin, Seo Young Seok
Department of Psychology, Pusan National University, Korea.
Psychol Rep. 2006 Oct;99(2):351-6. doi: 10.2466/pr0.99.2.351-356.
A language analysis program, Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC), was successful in identifying various psychological variables. This study investigated the relationship between spoken language and age inferred from drama scripts of 162 characters, analyzed by the Korean-LIWC across 4 age categories (10-19, 20-39, 40-59, and 60-79 years). Analysis indicated that younger characters use fewer phrases, morphemes, nouns, auxiliary words, and adverbs than older characters, suggesting less cognitive development of younger characters. In addition, younger characters used less positive words for emotion and achievement than older characters. These data appear contrary to the negative stereotypes of aging people.
一种语言分析程序,即语言查询与字数统计(LIWC),成功识别出了各种心理变量。本研究调查了162个角色的戏剧剧本中口语与推断出的年龄之间的关系,这些剧本由韩语版LIWC在4个年龄类别(10 - 19岁、20 - 39岁、40 - 59岁和60 - 79岁)中进行分析。分析表明,较年轻的角色比较年长的角色使用的短语、语素、名词、助词和副词更少,这表明较年轻角色的认知发展程度较低。此外,较年轻的角色在表达情感和成就时使用的积极词汇比较年长的角色少。这些数据似乎与对老年人的负面刻板印象相反。