Prototypes in emotion concepts

Author:

Wilson Paul1ORCID,Lewandowska-Tomaszczyk Barbara2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of English Studies, Department of Corpus and Computational Linguistics, University of Lodz , Pomorska 171/173 Lodz , Poland

2. Department of Language and Communication, University of Applied Sciences in Konin , 1, Przyjazni str. Konin , Poland

Abstract

Abstract Although we have gained great insight into the variety of cultural influences on emotion concept prototypes from a plethora of studies examining such cross-cultural effects, there has been relatively little academic focus on the nature of emotion concept prototypes within a cultural perspective. Our discussion of the nature of emotion concept prototypes centres on essentialist versus non-essentialist principles. We argue that at a general, decontextualised level, essentialist and non-essentialist principles predict similarity in the structure of emotion concept prototypes. We further argue that context is central in assessments of the nature of emotion concept prototypes from a cultural perspective. Rather than asking how emotion concept prototypes differ as a consequence of how certain influences might vary from one culture to another, a key question is whether emotion concept prototypes vary in different contexts within and between cultures and what this might inform us about the nature of emotion concept prototypes.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Communication,Language and Linguistics

Reference73 articles.

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3. Bar, Moshe. 2007. The proactive brain: Using analogies and associations to generate predictions. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 11(7). 280–289. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tics.2007.05.005.

4. Barrett, Lisa. F. (n.d.). Prototype views of emotion concepts - How Emotions Are Made. Available at: https://how-emotions-are-made.com/notes/Prototype_views_of_emotion_concepts (accessed 30 August 2021).

5. Barrett, Lisa F. 2006. Solving the emotion paradox: Categorization and the experience of emotion. Personality and Social Psychology Review 10(1). 20–46.

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