The World of Emotions is not Two-Dimensional
Ghent University Hospital · University of Geneva · +1 more institution
Abstract
For more than half a century, emotion researchers have attempted to establish the dimensional space that most economically accounts for similarities and differences in emotional experience. Today, many researchers focus exclusively on two-dimensional models involving valence and arousal. Adopting a theoretically based approach, we show for three languages that four dimensions are needed to satisfactorily represent similarities and differences in the meaning of emotion words. In order of importance, these dimensions are evaluation-pleasantness, potency-control, activation-arousal, and unpredictability. They were identified on the basis of the applicability of 144 features representing the six components of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 25.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 22
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology