The Impact of Context on Affective Norms: A Case of Study With Suspense

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2019-08Department
Ingeniería InformáticaSource
Front. Psychol. 10:1988Abstract
The emotional response to a stimulus is typically measured in three variables called
valence, arousal and dominance. Based on such dimensions, Bradley and Lang (1999)
published the Affective Norms for English Words (ANEW), a corpus of affective ratings
for 1,034 non-contextualized words. Expanded and adapted to many languages, ANEW
provides a corpus to evaluate and to predict human responses to different stimuli, and
it has been used in a number of studies involving analysis of emotions. However, ANEW
seems not to appropriately predict affective responses to concepts when these are
contextualized in certain situational backgrounds, in which words can have different
connotations from those in non-contextualized scenarios. These contextualized affective
norms have not been sufficiently contrasted yet because the literature does not provide
a corpus of the ANEW list in specific contexts. On this basis, this paper reports on the
creation of a new corpus of affective norms for the original 1,034 ANEW words in a
particular context (a fictional scene of suspense). An extensive quantitative data analysis
comparing both corpora was carried out, confirming that the affective ratings are highly
influenced by the context.
Subjects
affective norms; situational context; valence; arousal; dominance; suspense; Spanish S-ANEWCollections
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