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Erschienen in:

21.05.2024

What are emotions and how many are there?

verfasst von: Joseph Woelfel, Kenton Bruce Anderson, Asa Iacobucci

Erschienen in: Quality & Quantity | Ausgabe 6/2024

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Abstract

Human emotion has been a focus of scientific research across a wide variety of scientific disciplines and, in spite of careful research dating back as far as Charles Darwin, no consensus has emerged as to what emotions are, how many there are, and whether they are sharply bounded biological processes or culturally defined processes with diffuse boundaries, changing in response to contextual factors. Recently, Cowen and Keltner published research applying what they call a “semantic space approach” to the study of emotion (Cowen in Trends Cogn Sci 22:274–276, 2018; in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2017; in Am Psychol 2019). Their method finds that respondents recognize 28 emotional categories arrayed in a 27-dimensional space. These categories are not sharply bounded, but tail off into one another. Some researchers (Barrett in Trends Cogn Sci 22(2):97–99, 2018) have called their methodology into question, and recommended alternative procedures to check these results. In this article we apply an alternative, widely used methodology for generating semantic spaces to Cowen and Keltner’s emotional categories. Results of this alternative (“Galileo”) analysis conducted in the United States and Singapore support the finding that the space in which these 28 emotional categories lie is a high dimensional space, and that they are indeed not sharply bounded. Additionally however, the Galileo method finds that the underlying space is non-Euclidean and it provides information about the actual sizes of the dimensions. Results also show that some of Cowen and Keltner’s emotional categories (such as frustration) may not be best described as emotions themselves, but rather as situations in which other emotions (e.g., anger, sadness, etc.) may be generated.

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Fußnoten
1
Size matters. When locating words on a piece of paper, for example, 2 dimensions will suffice unless one is concerned about the embossing of the ink in the third dimension because the projection in the third dimension is extremely small. String theory has proven resistant to measurement in physics due in part to the fact that the hypothesized 10 dimensions which strings inhabit are expected to be about 10−17th smaller than quarks.
 
2
In light of problems of replicability of research, many researchers have doubled down on the use of significance levels as evidence of their scientific rigor. While we don’t question the legitimacy of statistical theory, we do recommend a more studied approach to the use of significance tests in the age of the Internet and the massive datasets available. At 500 cases, a correlation of .08 is statistically significant, even though it only accounts for a little more than .05% of the variance. Simply knowing that a value is unlikely to be due to chance is not evidence that it is substantively important.
 
3
While the definition of measurement in social science is quite loose (e.g., “assignment of numbers to observations according to some rule”) the definition in the physical sciences is specific and unambiguous: e.g. “comparison to some standard.”.
 
4
Not all respondents completed all paired comparisons, some were indecipherable, and others exceeded Chauvenet’s Criterion, being three or more standard deviations above the largest mean score, which is a very conservative filter.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
What are emotions and how many are there?
verfasst von
Joseph Woelfel
Kenton Bruce Anderson
Asa Iacobucci
Publikationsdatum
21.05.2024
Verlag
Springer Netherlands
Erschienen in
Quality & Quantity / Ausgabe 6/2024
Print ISSN: 0033-5177
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7845
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11135-024-01897-8