Lise Abrams, Benjamin P Cote, María José Najas, Aysha H Gsibat, Katherine K White
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Narratives were recorded via Zoom, transcribed, and analyzed with Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count-22 to get measures of emotional word use, disfluencies, and linguistic distance. Results showed that negative valence increased age differences in speech production independent of picture arousal: Relative to younger adults, older adults used more positive words, fewer negative words, and had more silent pauses when telling narratives about negative pictures. In contrast, high arousal decreased age differences such that older adults used fewer positive words in narratives about positive pictures and more linguistically distant words evidenced by fewer present-tense verbs, relative to narratives about low-arousal pictures. Contrary to an explanation of enhanced regulation or control over emotions in older adulthood, these findings support the idea that older adults' speech production is influenced by their reactivity or affective response to emotional stimuli even when the task is not to communicate one's emotions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).</p>","PeriodicalId":3,"journal":{"name":"ACS Applied Electronic Materials","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Do pictures' emotional valence and arousal affect younger and older adults' narratives?\",\"authors\":\"Lise Abrams, Benjamin P Cote, María José Najas, Aysha H Gsibat, Katherine K White\",\"doi\":\"10.1037/pag0000808\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Emotional content, specifically negative valence, can differentially influence speech production in younger and older adults' autobiographical narratives, which have been interpreted as reflecting age differences in emotion regulation. However, age differences in emotional reactivity are another possible explanation, as younger and older adults frequently differ in their affective responses to negative and positive pictures. The present experiment investigated whether a picture's valence (pleasantness) and arousal (intensity) influenced older adults' production of narratives about those pictures. Thirty younger and 30 older participants produced narratives about pictures that varied in valence (positive, negative, and neutral) and arousal (high, low). Narratives were recorded via Zoom, transcribed, and analyzed with Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count-22 to get measures of emotional word use, disfluencies, and linguistic distance. Results showed that negative valence increased age differences in speech production independent of picture arousal: Relative to younger adults, older adults used more positive words, fewer negative words, and had more silent pauses when telling narratives about negative pictures. In contrast, high arousal decreased age differences such that older adults used fewer positive words in narratives about positive pictures and more linguistically distant words evidenced by fewer present-tense verbs, relative to narratives about low-arousal pictures. Contrary to an explanation of enhanced regulation or control over emotions in older adulthood, these findings support the idea that older adults' speech production is influenced by their reactivity or affective response to emotional stimuli even when the task is not to communicate one's emotions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
情绪内容,特别是负面情绪,会对年轻人和老年人自传体叙述中的语音产生不同的影响,这被解释为反映了情绪调节方面的年龄差异。然而,情绪反应能力的年龄差异也是另一种可能的解释,因为年轻人和老年人对负面和正面图片的情绪反应经常不同。本实验研究了图片的情价(愉快度)和唤醒(强度)是否会影响老年人对这些图片的叙述。分别有 30 名年轻人和 30 名老年人对不同情绪(积极、消极和中性)和唤醒(高、低)的图片进行了叙述。通过 Zoom 对叙述进行录制、转录,并使用 Linguistic Inquiry 和 Word Count-22 进行分析,以获得情感用词、语句不通顺和语言距离的测量结果。结果表明,负情态增加了语言表达的年龄差异,而与图像唤醒无关:与年轻人相比,老年人在讲述负面图片时使用更多的正面词语、更少的负面词语和更多的无声停顿。与此相反,高唤醒度缩小了年龄差异,因此相对于低唤醒度图片的叙述,老年人在叙述积极图片时使用的积极词汇更少,而语言上的疏远词汇则更多,表现为使用的现在时动词更少。与老年人对情绪的调节或控制能力增强的解释相反,这些研究结果支持这样一种观点,即老年人的语言表达会受到他们对情绪刺激的反应性或情感反应的影响,即使他们的任务不是传达自己的情绪。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, 版权所有)。
Do pictures' emotional valence and arousal affect younger and older adults' narratives?
Emotional content, specifically negative valence, can differentially influence speech production in younger and older adults' autobiographical narratives, which have been interpreted as reflecting age differences in emotion regulation. However, age differences in emotional reactivity are another possible explanation, as younger and older adults frequently differ in their affective responses to negative and positive pictures. The present experiment investigated whether a picture's valence (pleasantness) and arousal (intensity) influenced older adults' production of narratives about those pictures. Thirty younger and 30 older participants produced narratives about pictures that varied in valence (positive, negative, and neutral) and arousal (high, low). Narratives were recorded via Zoom, transcribed, and analyzed with Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count-22 to get measures of emotional word use, disfluencies, and linguistic distance. Results showed that negative valence increased age differences in speech production independent of picture arousal: Relative to younger adults, older adults used more positive words, fewer negative words, and had more silent pauses when telling narratives about negative pictures. In contrast, high arousal decreased age differences such that older adults used fewer positive words in narratives about positive pictures and more linguistically distant words evidenced by fewer present-tense verbs, relative to narratives about low-arousal pictures. Contrary to an explanation of enhanced regulation or control over emotions in older adulthood, these findings support the idea that older adults' speech production is influenced by their reactivity or affective response to emotional stimuli even when the task is not to communicate one's emotions. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).