Revisiting the dimensional structure of the emotion domain
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Date
Authors
Veirman, Elke
Fontaine, Johnny R.J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Abstract
Recent research has claimed that a novelty dimension is needed to represent the cognitive emotion
structure over and above valence, power and arousal. Novelty emerged when student samples evaluated
the meaning of 24 emotion terms on 142 emotion features. This claim is debatable, however, because
to date novelty has never been found in similarity sorting studies. It is possible that novelty emerged
because sophisticated student samples evaluated emotion terms on emotion features. The current
research identified a large, representative set of emotion terms using a free-listing task in a middle
childhood up to early adulthood sample (N = 5071). Children, adolescents, students and adults (N =
1184) then evaluated the similarity between these emotion terms using a similarity rating task without
priming any emotion feature. Novelty robustly emerged as the fourth dimension. The existence of
novelty is thus confirmed with a different method across a wide variety of participants.
Description
Citation
Veirman, E. & Fontaine, J.R.J. 2015. Revisiting the dimensional structure of the emotion domain. Cognition & Emotion, 29(6):1026–1041. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02699931.2014.963518]