info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Agreement on emotion labels’ frequency in eight Spanish linguistic areas
Fecha
2020-08Registro en:
Delgado, Ana R.; Prieto, Gerardo; Burin, Debora Ines; Agreement on emotion labels’ frequency in eight Spanish linguistic areas; Public Library of Science; Plos One; 15; 8; 8-2020; 1-10
1932-6203
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Delgado, Ana R.
Prieto, Gerardo
Burin, Debora Ines
Resumen
Various traditions have investigated the relationship between emotion and language. For the basic emotions view, emotional prototypes are lexically sedimented in language, evidenced in cultural convergence in emotional recognition and expression tasks. For constructionist theories, conceptual knowledge supported by language is at the core of emotions. Understanding emotion words is embedded in various interrelated constructs such asemotional intelligence, emotion knowledge or emotion differentiation, and is related to, but different from, general vocabulary. A clear advantage of Emotion Vocabulary over most emotion-related constructs is that it can be measured objectively. In two successive corpus-based studies, we tested the predictions of concordance and absolute agreement on the frequency of use of a total of 100 Spanish emotion labels in the eight main Spanishspeaking areas: Spain, Mexico-Central America, River Plate, Continental Caribbean, Andean, Antilles, Chilean, and the United States. In both studies, the intraclass correlation coefficient was statistically different from the null and very large, over .95, as was the Kendall’s concordance coefficient, indicating broad consensus among the Spanish linguistic areas. From an applied perspective, our results provide supporting evidence for the similarity in frequency, and therefore cross-cultural generalizability regarding familiarity of the 100 emotion labels as item stems or as experimental stimuli without going through a process of additional adaptation. On a broader scope, these results add evidence on the role of language for emotion theories. In this regard, countries and regions compared here share the sameSpanish language, but differ in several aspects in history, culture, and socio-economic structure.