Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

The Interplay between Emotion and Time Movement Metaphors: A Cross-cultural Study between English Speakers and Mandarin Speakers

Wu, Yu-Hsin LU (2019) PSYP01 20191
Department of Psychology
Abstract
Time is often talked about in terms of movement metaphors because that can provide a more concrete spatial experience to understand the abstract concept of time. Specifically, there are two kinds of time movement metaphors: ego-moving metaphor implies that people perceive themselves as agents moving through time; time-moving metaphor implies that people comprehend time as a conveyor belt moving toward them. Previous studies suggested that emotion can influence the explicit choice of time movement perspectives. Yet, it is still unclear whether emotional information from a sentence and facial expression can influence time movement perspectives by implicit reaction time paradigm as well as to what extent these relations can be generalized... (More)
Time is often talked about in terms of movement metaphors because that can provide a more concrete spatial experience to understand the abstract concept of time. Specifically, there are two kinds of time movement metaphors: ego-moving metaphor implies that people perceive themselves as agents moving through time; time-moving metaphor implies that people comprehend time as a conveyor belt moving toward them. Previous studies suggested that emotion can influence the explicit choice of time movement perspectives. Yet, it is still unclear whether emotional information from a sentence and facial expression can influence time movement perspectives by implicit reaction time paradigm as well as to what extent these relations can be generalized across cultures. Thus, this study used a temporal inference task to investigate the emotional effects of semantic valence and facial expressions on the inference process of time metaphors among English speakers and Mandarin speakers. Findings indicate that semantic valence, metaphor type, and culture jointly influence the response time of temporal inference. Especially, the results imply an association between negative semantic valence and time-moving metaphor among Mandarin speakers, but not among English speakers. However, no significant effect of facial expressions was found. The present study offers new aspects of emotion and time movement perspectives in terms of temporal inference processing across European English speakers and East Asian Mandarin speakers. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Wu, Yu-Hsin LU
supervisor
organization
course
PSYP01 20191
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
time movement metaphor, ego-moving, time-moving, semantic valence, facial expression, cross-cultural differences
language
English
id
8985133
date added to LUP
2019-06-18 11:39:16
date last changed
2019-06-18 11:39:16
@misc{8985133,
  abstract     = {{Time is often talked about in terms of movement metaphors because that can provide a more concrete spatial experience to understand the abstract concept of time. Specifically, there are two kinds of time movement metaphors: ego-moving metaphor implies that people perceive themselves as agents moving through time; time-moving metaphor implies that people comprehend time as a conveyor belt moving toward them. Previous studies suggested that emotion can influence the explicit choice of time movement perspectives. Yet, it is still unclear whether emotional information from a sentence and facial expression can influence time movement perspectives by implicit reaction time paradigm as well as to what extent these relations can be generalized across cultures. Thus, this study used a temporal inference task to investigate the emotional effects of semantic valence and facial expressions on the inference process of time metaphors among English speakers and Mandarin speakers. Findings indicate that semantic valence, metaphor type, and culture jointly influence the response time of temporal inference. Especially, the results imply an association between negative semantic valence and time-moving metaphor among Mandarin speakers, but not among English speakers. However, no significant effect of facial expressions was found. The present study offers new aspects of emotion and time movement perspectives in terms of temporal inference processing across European English speakers and East Asian Mandarin speakers. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed.}},
  author       = {{Wu, Yu-Hsin}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{The Interplay between Emotion and Time Movement Metaphors: A Cross-cultural Study between English Speakers and Mandarin Speakers}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}