scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

The Measurement of Meaning

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors deal with the nature and theory of meaning and present a new, objective method for its measurement which they call the semantic differential, which can be adapted to a wide variety of problems in such areas as clinical psychology, social psychology, linguistics, mass communications, esthetics, and political science.
Abstract
In this pioneering study, the authors deal with the nature and theory of meaning and present a new, objective method for its measurement which they call the semantic differential. This instrument is not a specific test, but rather a general technique of measurement that can be adapted to a wide variety of problems in such areas as clinical psychology, social psychology, linguistics, mass communications, esthetics, and political science. The core of the book is the authors' description, application, and evaluation of this important tool and its far-reaching implications for empirical research.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of colour emotion and colour preference. Part I: Colour emotions for single colours

TL;DR: In a psychophysical experiment, 31 observers, including 14 British and 17 Chinese subjects assessed 20 colours on 10 colour-emotion scales: warm-cool, heavy-light, modern-classical, clean-dirty, active-passive, hard-soft, tense-relaxed, fresh-stale, masculine-feminine, and like-dislike as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

A general factor of personality: Evidence for the Big One in the five-factor model.

TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive theoretical model of personality structure was proposed with the Big One at the highest level of the hierarchy. But, the model was based on a five-factor model.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anticipatory affect: neural correlates and consequences for choice

TL;DR: Evidence that activation in specific brain circuits changes during anticipation of monetary incentives is reviewed, that this activation correlates with affective experience and that activity in these circuits may influence subsequent choice support a neurally plausible framework for understanding how anticipatory affect can influence choice.