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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessing the effectiveness of a large database of emotion-eliciting films : a new tool for emotion researchers

TLDR
In this article, the authors developed and tested the effectiveness of a new and comprehensive set of emotional film excerpts and found that the film clips were effective with regard to several criteria such as emotional discreteness, arousal, positive and negative affect.
Abstract
Using emotional film clips is one of the most popular and effective methods of emotion elicitation. The main goal of the present study was to develop and test the effectiveness of a new and comprehensive set of emotional film excerpts. Fifty film experts were asked to remember specific film scenes that elicited fear, anger, sadness, disgust, amusement, tenderness, as well as emotionally neutral scenes. For each emotion, the 10 most frequently mentioned scenes were selected and cut into film clips. Next, 364 participants viewed the film clips in individual laboratory sessions and rated each film on multiple dimensions. Results showed that the film clips were effective with regard to several criteria such as emotional discreteness, arousal, positive and negative affect. Finally, ranking scores were computed for 24 classification criteria: Subjective arousal, positive and negative affect (derived from the PANAS; Watson & Tellegen, 1988), a positive and a negative affect scores derived from the Differential Emotions Scale (DES; Izard et al., 1974), six emotional discreteness scores (for anger, disgust, sadness, fear, amusement and tenderness), and 15 “mixed feelings” scores assessing the effectiveness of each film excerpt to produce blends of specific emotions. In addition, a number of emotionally neutral film clips were also validated. The database and editing instructions to construct the film clips have been made freely available in a website.

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Citations
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Please be logical, I am in a bad mood: An electrophysiological study of mood effects on reasoning

TL;DR: Results provide further electrophysiological evidence of the influence of mood on other cognitive processes, particularly on the anticipation and processing of logical conclusions during online reasoning tasks, and support to theoretical views that posit that a more analytic reasoning style might be implemented under a negative mood state.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Functionally Guided, Connectivity-Based rTMS on Amygdala Activation

TL;DR: In this paper, a task-related, connectivity-based repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) was used to treat psychiatric disorders using the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC).
Posted Content

Contrastive Learning of Subject-Invariant EEG Representations for Cross-Subject Emotion Recognition.

TL;DR: In this article, a Contrastive Learning method for Inter-Subject Alignment (CLISA) was proposed to minimize the inter-subject differences by maximizing the similarity in EEG signals across subjects when they received the same stimuli in contrast to different ones.
Journal ArticleDOI

Parasympathetic Concomitants of Habitual, Spontaneous, and Instructed Emotional Suppression

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relation between habitual or trait-like suppression, spontaneous, and instructed suppression with changes in respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) during negative emotion experience.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: The PANAS scales.

TL;DR: Two 10-item mood scales that comprise the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) are developed and are shown to be highly internally consistent, largely uncorrelated, and stable at appropriate levels over a 2-month time period.
Book

Emotion and Adaptation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the person-environment relationship: motivation and coping Cognition and emotion Issues of causality, goal incongruent (negative) emotions Goal congruent (positive) and problematic emotions.
Journal ArticleDOI

An argument for basic emotions

TL;DR: This work has shown that not only the intensity of an emotion but also its direction may vary greatly both in the amygdala and in the brain during the course of emotion regulation.
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Antecedent- and response-focused emotion regulation: Divergent consequences for experience, expression, and physiology.

TL;DR: Reappraisal decreased disgust experience, whereas suppression increased sympathetic activation, suggesting that these 2 emotion regulatory processes may have different adaptive consequences.
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