Molinari Carlos, Burin Débora, Saux Gastón, Barreyro Juan P, Irrazabal Natalia, Bechis María S, Duarte Aníbal, Ramenzoni Verónica
Universidad de Buenos Aires, Spain.
Psicothema. 2009 Feb;21(1):9-14.
Story events are a psychological cause of emotional reactions, which in turn, motivate subsequent actions. This study addresses the degree of specificity of readers' inferences about fictional characters' emotions. In Experiment 1 (off-line), participants read short stories and selected the emotional term that was more consistent with the protagonist's emotion. Results indicated that participants tended to favor the specific emotional word. In Experiment 2 (on-line), reading times were longer when a target sentence described the protagonist in an emotional state that differed in family from the adequate emotional state, but belonged to the same class and valence of emotions, but no differences were found between emotions belonging to the same family. Overall, these results indicate that emotional inferences are more specific than valence and class, but not specific enough to differentiate subtleties within a family of emotions.
故事事件是情绪反应的心理成因,而情绪反应反过来又会激发后续行动。本研究探讨了读者对虚构人物情绪推断的具体程度。在实验1(离线实验)中,参与者阅读短篇小说并选择与主人公情绪更相符的情绪词汇。结果表明,参与者倾向于选择具体的情绪词汇。在实验2(在线实验)中,当目标句子描述主人公处于一种在情感家族中与恰当情绪状态不同但属于同一类别和效价的情绪状态时,阅读时间会更长,但在属于同一情感家族的情绪之间未发现差异。总体而言,这些结果表明,情绪推断比效价和类别更具体,但还不足以区分同一情感家族内的细微差别。