A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words

Words are the basic units of language and vital for comprehending the language system. Lexical processing research has always focused on either conceptual or affective word meaning. Previous studies have indirectly compared the conceptual and affective meanings of words. This study used emotion-lade...

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Main Authors: Dandan Jia, Ling Pan, Mei Chen, Zhijin Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
Series:Behavioral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/1/69
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author Dandan Jia
Ling Pan
Mei Chen
Zhijin Zhou
author_facet Dandan Jia
Ling Pan
Mei Chen
Zhijin Zhou
author_sort Dandan Jia
collection DOAJ
description Words are the basic units of language and vital for comprehending the language system. Lexical processing research has always focused on either conceptual or affective word meaning. Previous studies have indirectly compared the conceptual and affective meanings of words. This study used emotion-laden words, a special type of dual-meaning word, to directly compare the time course of processing conceptual and affective word meanings. Free association was applied in Experiment 1 to investigate the time course of conceptual and affective meanings in dual-meaning words. The results showed that conceptual-meaning processing was superior to affective-meaning processing. In Experiment 2, the semantic/affective priming paradigm was used to directly compare the time courses of processing conceptual and affective word meanings by manipulating stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) in different ways. The results showed that semantic and affective priming effects could be obtained under short SOA conditions, with no differences between them. Consistent with Experiment 1, only the semantic priming effect was observed in the long SOA condition. These findings suggest that the conceptual and affective meanings of words have different time courses. The conceptual meaning of words includes automatic and controlled processing, whereas the affective meaning mainly involves automatic processing.
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spelling doaj-art-634182fb1e334bd68ddc327161ea62752025-01-24T13:22:48ZengMDPI AGBehavioral Sciences2076-328X2025-01-011516910.3390/bs15010069A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of WordsDandan Jia0Ling Pan1Mei Chen2Zhijin Zhou3School of Management, Henan University of Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou 450046, ChinaSchool of Management, Henan University of Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou 450046, ChinaSchool of Management, Henan University of Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou 450046, ChinaSchool of Psychology, Central China Normal University, Wuhan 430079, ChinaWords are the basic units of language and vital for comprehending the language system. Lexical processing research has always focused on either conceptual or affective word meaning. Previous studies have indirectly compared the conceptual and affective meanings of words. This study used emotion-laden words, a special type of dual-meaning word, to directly compare the time course of processing conceptual and affective word meanings. Free association was applied in Experiment 1 to investigate the time course of conceptual and affective meanings in dual-meaning words. The results showed that conceptual-meaning processing was superior to affective-meaning processing. In Experiment 2, the semantic/affective priming paradigm was used to directly compare the time courses of processing conceptual and affective word meanings by manipulating stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) in different ways. The results showed that semantic and affective priming effects could be obtained under short SOA conditions, with no differences between them. Consistent with Experiment 1, only the semantic priming effect was observed in the long SOA condition. These findings suggest that the conceptual and affective meanings of words have different time courses. The conceptual meaning of words includes automatic and controlled processing, whereas the affective meaning mainly involves automatic processing.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/1/69affective meaningconceptual meaningemotion-laden wordspriming effectSOA
spellingShingle Dandan Jia
Ling Pan
Mei Chen
Zhijin Zhou
A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
Behavioral Sciences
affective meaning
conceptual meaning
emotion-laden words
priming effect
SOA
title A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
title_full A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
title_fullStr A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
title_full_unstemmed A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
title_short A Time Course Analysis of the Conceptual and Affective Meanings of Words
title_sort time course analysis of the conceptual and affective meanings of words
topic affective meaning
conceptual meaning
emotion-laden words
priming effect
SOA
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-328X/15/1/69
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