Emotion semantics show both cultural variation and universal structure
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Jackson, Joshua Conrad
Watts, Joseph
Henry, Teague R
List, Johann Mattis
Forkel, Robert
Mucha, Peter
Greenhill, Simon
Gray, Russell D
Lindquist, Kristen A
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American Association for the Advancement of Science
Abstract
Many human languages have words for emotions such as “anger” and “fear,” yet it is not clear whether
these emotions have similar meanings across languages, or why their meanings might vary. We
estimate emotion semantics across a sample of 2474 spoken languages using “colexification”—a
phenomenon in which languages name semantically related concepts with the same word. Analyses
show significant variation in networks of emotion concept colexification, which is predicted by
the geographic proximity of language families. We also find evidence of universal structure in emotion
colexification networks, with all families differentiating emotions primarily on the basis of hedonic
valence and physiological activation. Our findings contribute to debates about universality and
diversity in how humans understand and experience emotion.
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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