Giraud Michelle, Marelli Marco, Nava Elena
Department of Psychology, University of Milano-Bicocca, Piazza dell'Ateneo Nuovo 1, 20126, Milano, Italy.
Heliyon. 2023 Jun 30;9(7):e17864. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e17864. eCollection 2023 Jul.
Recent constructionist theories have suggested that language and sensory experience play a crucial role not only in how individuals categorise emotions but also in how they experience and shape them, helping to acquire abstract concepts that are used to make sense of bodily perceptions associated with specific emotions. Here, we aimed to investigate the role of sensory experience in conceptualising bodily felt emotions by asking 126 Italian blind participants to freely recall in which part of the body they commonly feel specific emotions (N = 15). Participants varied concerning visual experience in terms of blindness onset (i.e., congenital vs late) and degree of visual experience (i.e., total vs partial sensory loss). Using an Italian semantic model to estimate to what extent discrete emotions are associated with body parts in language experience, we found that all participants' reports correlated with the model predictions. Interestingly, blind - and especially congenitally blind - participants' responses were more strongly correlated with the model, suggesting that language might be one of the possible compensative mechanisms for the lack of visual feedback in constructing bodily felt emotions. Our findings present theoretical implications for the study of emotions, as well as potential real-world applications for blind individuals, by revealing, on the one hand, that vision plays an essential role in the construction of felt emotions and the way we talk about our related bodily (emotional) experiences. On the other hand, evidence that blind individuals rely more strongly on linguistic cues suggests that vision is a strong cue to acquire emotional information from the surrounding world, influencing how we experience emotions. While our findings do not suggest that blind individuals experience emotions in an atypical and dysfunctional way, they nonetheless support the view that promoting the use of non-visual emotional signs and body language since early on might help the blind child to develop a good emotional awareness as well as good emotion regulation abilities.
近期的建构主义理论表明,语言和感官体验不仅在个体如何对情绪进行分类方面发挥着关键作用,而且在他们如何体验和塑造情绪方面也起着关键作用,有助于获取抽象概念,这些概念用于理解与特定情绪相关的身体感知。在此,我们旨在通过让126名意大利盲人参与者自由回忆他们通常在身体的哪个部位感受到特定情绪(N = 15),来研究感官体验在将身体感受到的情绪概念化过程中的作用。参与者在视觉体验方面因失明 onset(即先天性与后天性)和视觉体验程度(即完全与部分感觉丧失)而有所不同。使用意大利语义模型来估计离散情绪在语言体验中与身体部位的关联程度,我们发现所有参与者的报告都与模型预测相关。有趣的是,盲人——尤其是先天性盲人——参与者的反应与模型的相关性更强,这表明语言可能是在构建身体感受到的情绪时缺乏视觉反馈的一种可能的补偿机制。我们的研究结果对情绪研究具有理论意义,同时对盲人个体也有潜在的现实应用,一方面揭示了视觉在构建感受到的情绪以及我们谈论相关身体(情绪)体验的方式中起着至关重要的作用。另一方面,有证据表明盲人个体更强烈地依赖语言线索,这表明视觉是从周围世界获取情绪信息的一个强有力的线索,影响着我们体验情绪的方式。虽然我们的研究结果并不表明盲人个体以非典型和功能失调的方式体验情绪,但它们仍然支持这样一种观点,即从早期就促进使用非视觉情绪信号和肢体语言可能有助于盲童培养良好的情绪意识以及良好的情绪调节能力。