1,029 research outputs found
Phonological Iconicity
The arbitrariness of the linguistic sign is a fundamental assumption in modern
linguistic theory. In recent years, however, a growing amount of research has
investigated the nature of non-arbitrary relations between linguistic sounds
and semantics. This review aims at illustrating the amount of findings
obtained so far and to organize and evaluate different lines of research
dedicated to the issue of phonological iconicity. In particular, we summarize
findings on the processing of onomatopoetic expressions, ideophones, and
phonaesthemes, relations between syntactic classes and phonology, as well as
sound-shape and sound-affect correspondences at the level of phonemic
contrasts. Many of these findings have been obtained across a range of
different languages suggesting an internal relation between sublexical units
and attributes as a potentially universal pattern
On the Relation between the General Affective Meaning and the Basic Sublexical, Lexical, and Inter-lexical Features of Poetic Texts - A Case Study Using 57 Poems of H. M. Enzensberger
The literary genre of poetry is inherently related to the expression and
elicitation of emotion via both content and form. To explore the nature of
this affective impact at an extremely basic textual level, we collected
ratings on eight different general affective meaning scales—valence, arousal,
friendliness, sadness, spitefulness, poeticity, onomatopoeia, and liking—for
57 German poems (“die verteidigung der wölfe”) which the contemporary author
H. M. Enzensberger had labeled as either “friendly,” “sad,” or “spiteful.”
Following Jakobson's (1960) view on the vivid interplay of hierarchical text
levels, we used multiple regression analyses to explore the specific
influences of affective features from three different text levels (sublexical,
lexical, and inter-lexical) on the perceived general affective meaning of the
poems using three types of predictors: (1) Lexical predictor variables
capturing the mean valence and arousal potential of words; (2) Inter-lexical
predictors quantifying peaks, ranges, and dynamic changes within the lexical
affective content; (3) Sublexical measures of basic affective tone according
to sound-meaning correspondences at the sublexical level (see Aryani et al.,
2016). We find the lexical predictors to account for a major amount of up to
50% of the variance in affective ratings. Moreover, inter-lexical and
sublexical predictors account for a large portion of additional variance in
the perceived general affective meaning. Together, the affective properties of
all used textual features account for 43–70% of the variance in the affective
ratings and still for 23–48% of the variance in the more abstract aesthetic
ratings. In sum, our approach represents a novel method that successfully
relates a prominent part of variance in perceived general affective meaning in
this corpus of German poems to quantitative estimates of affective properties
of textual components at the sublexical, lexical, and inter-lexical level
An fMRI Study on How Descriptions of Supra-Natural Events Entertain and Enchant
Literature containing supra-natural, or magical events has enchanted
generations of readers. When reading narratives describing such events,
readers mentally simulate a text world different from the real one. The
corresponding violation of world-knowledge during this simulation likely
increases cognitive processing demands for ongoing discourse integration,
catches readers’ attention, and might thus contribute to the pleasure and deep
emotional experience associated with ludic immersive reading. In the present
study, we presented participants in an MR scanner with passages selected
fromthe Harry Potter book series, half of which described magical events,
while the other half served as control condition. Passages in both conditions
were closely matched for relevant psycholinguistic variables including, e.g.,
emotional valence and arousal, passage-wise mean word imageability and
frequency, and syntactic complexity. Post-hoc ratings showed that readers
considered supra-natural contents more surprising and more strongly associated
with reading pleasure than control passages. In the fMRI data, we found
stronger neural activation for the supra-natural than the control condition in
bilateral inferior frontal gyri, bilateral inferior parietal lobules, left
fusiformgyrus, and left amygdala. The increased activation in the amygdala
(part of the salience and emotion processing network) appears to be associated
with feelings of surprise and the reading pleasure, which supra-natural
events, full of novelty and unexpectedness, brought about. The involvement of
bilateral inferior frontal gyri likely reflects higher cognitive processing
demand due to world knowledge violations, whereas increased attention to
supra-natural events is reflected in inferior frontal gyri and inferior
parietal lobules that are part of the fronto-parietal attention network
When emotions are expressed figuratively:psycholinguistic and affective norms of 619 idioms for German (PANIG)
Despite flourishing research on the relationship between emotion and literal language, and despite the pervasiveness of figurative expressions in communication, the role of figurative language in conveying affect has been under-investigated. This study provides affective and psycholinguistic norms for 619 German idiomatic expressions and explores the relationships between affective and psycholinguistic idiom properties. German native speakers rated each idiom for emotional valence, arousal, familiarity, semantic transparency, figurativeness, and concreteness. They also described the figurative meaning of each idiom, and rated how confident they were on the attributed meaning. Results showed that idioms rated high in valence were also rated high in arousal. Negative idioms were rated as more arousing than positive ones, in line with results on single words. Furthermore, arousal correlated positively with figurativeness (supporting the idea that figurative expressions are more emotionally engaging than literal expressions) and with concreteness and semantic transparency. This suggests that idioms may convey a more direct reference to sensory representations, mediated by the meaning of their constituting words. Arousal correlated positively with familiarity. In addition, positive idioms were rated as more familiar than negative idioms. Finally, idioms without a literal counterpart were rated as more emotionally valenced and arousing than idioms with a literal counterpart. Although the meaning of ambiguous idioms was less correctly defined than that of unambiguous idioms, ambiguous idioms were rated as more concrete than unambiguous ones. We also discuss the relationships between the various psycholinguistic variables characterising idioms, with reference to the literature on idiom structure and processing
The emotion potential of words and passages in reading Harry Potter:an fMRI study
Previous studies suggested that the emotional connotation of single words automatically recruits attention. We investigated the potential of words to induce emotional engagement when reading texts. In an fMRI experiment, we presented 120 text passages from the Harry Potter book series. Results showed significant correlations between affective word (lexical) ratings and passage ratings. Furthermore, affective lexical ratings correlated with activity in regions associated with emotion, situation model building, multi-modal semantic integration, and Theory of Mind. We distinguished differential influences of affective lexical, inter-lexical, and supra-lexical variables: differential effects of lexical valence were significant in the left amygdala, while effects of arousal-span (the dynamic range of arousal across a passage) were significant in the left amygdala and insula. However, we found no differential effect of passage ratings in emotion-associated regions. Our results support the hypothesis that the emotion potential of short texts can be predicted by lexical and inter-lexical affective variables
A national cybersecurity management framework for developing countries
Abstract : Please refer to full text to view abstract.D.Phil. (Computer Science
10 years of BAWLing into affective and aesthetic processes in reading: what are the echoes?
Reading is not only “cold” information processing, but involves affective and
aesthetic processes that go far beyond what current models of word
recognition, sentence processing, or text comprehension can explain. To
investigate such “hot” reading processes, standardized instruments that
quantify both psycholinguistic and emotional variables at the sublexical,
lexical, inter-, and supralexical levels (e.g., phonological iconicity, word
valence, arousal-span, or passage suspense) are necessary. One such
instrument, the Berlin Affective Word List (BAWL) has been used in over 50
published studies demonstrating effects of lexical emotional variables on all
relevant processing levels (experiential, behavioral, neuronal). In this
paper, we first present new data from several BAWL studies. Together, these
studies examine various views on affective effects in reading arising from
dimensional (e.g., valence) and discrete emotion features (e.g., happiness),
or embodied cognition features like smelling. Second, we extend our
investigation of the complex issue of affective word processing to words
characterized by a mixture of affects. These words entail positive and
negative valence, and/or features making them beautiful or ugly. Finally, we
discuss tentative neurocognitive models of affective word processing in the
light of the present results, raising new issues for future studies
International Space Negotiations, Emerging Space Powers, and U.S. Efforts to Protect the Military Use of Space
In recent years strategists and diplomats from space faring nations have engaged in debates with their foreign counterparts (and in some cases, with each other) on a range of issues related to norms and laws – or the relative lack thereof – applicable to the military use of space. Questions have run the gamut from the very broad (should the slim volume of outer space law relevant to military platforms and operations be expanded?) to the very specific (what new technical tools are available for the verification regime of a notional future space arms control agreement?)
Arms Control in the Third Space Age: Assessing International Efforts to Regulate Military Operations in Outer Space in the “3 C’s” Era
Preserving1and protecting the free and open use of outer space benefits all space-faring nations and is vital to U.S. national interests. U.S. military and civil space operations, however, face a number of growing challenges. Several countries possess or are developing means to disrupt or destroy space systems; space debris threatens the safe passage of spacecraft; and outer space is an environment where the United States now competes with a rapidly growing number of other space-faring nations. To remain the world’s preeminent military space power, the United States must consider a variety of means and strategies to address these challenges
Towards a framework for building security operation centers
In this thesis a framework for Security Operation Centers (SOCs) is proposed. It was developed by utilising Systems Engineering best practices, combined with industry-accepted standards and frameworks, such as the TM Forum’s eTOM framework, CoBIT, ITIL, and ISO/IEC 27002:2005. This framework encompasses the design considerations, the operational considerations and the means to measure the effectiveness and efficiency of SOCs. The intent is to provide guidance to consumers on how to compare and measure the capabilities of SOCs provided by disparate service providers, and to provide service providers (internal and external) a framework to use when building and improving their offerings. The importance of providing a consistent, measureable and guaranteed service to customers is becoming more important, as there is an increased focus on holistic management of security. This has in turn resulted in an increased number of both internal and managed service provider solutions. While some frameworks exist for designing, building and operating specific security technologies used within SOCs, we did not find any comprehensive framework for designing, building and managing SOCs. Consequently, consumers of SOCs do not enjoy a constant experience from vendors, and may experience inconsistent services from geographically dispersed offerings provided by the same vendor
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