Abstract

Embodied cognition research suggests that bodily experiences might ground mental representations of emotional valence in the vertical dimension of space (i.e., positive is up and negative is down). Accordingly, recent studies show that upward and downward arm movements may also influence the evaluation of valence-laden stimuli, suggesting that upward (downwards) movements lead to more positive (negative) evaluations. Interestingly, these studies typically did not investigate paradigms that require a direct hand interaction with the stimuli. With the advent of touchscreen devices and their use for experimental environments, however, a direct and more natural hand interaction with the stimuli has come to the fore. In this regard, the goal of the present study is to examine how direct hand interaction with valence-laden stimuli on a touchscreen monitor affects their perceived valence. To do so, participants evaluated emotional pictures after touching and moving them either upwards or downwards across a vertically mounted touchscreen. In contrast to previous findings, the results suggest that positive pictures were evaluated as more positive after downward movements while negative pictures were evaluated as less negative following upward movements. This finding may indicate that a matching between the pictures’ valence and the valence associated with their vertical touch location leads to more positive evaluations. Thus, the present study extends earlier results by an important point: Touching the emotional pictures during movement may influence their valence processing.

Highlights

  • Colloquial expressions like “jumping up for joy” or “feeling down” are commonly used to express positive or negative emotional states. Such metaphorical expressions might serve to facilitate the mental representation of more abstract concepts like happiness or sadness by grounding them into bodily experiences in the vertical space [1,2]

  • Participants were recruited between October the second and December the eighteenth of 2015 by means of the Online Recruitment System for Economic Experiments (ORSEE [18])

  • The aim of the present study was to investigate whether interacting with valence-laden pictures in a touchscreen device would affect their perceived valence

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Summary

Introduction

Colloquial expressions like “jumping up for joy” or “feeling down” are commonly used to express positive or negative emotional states. Such metaphorical expressions might serve to facilitate the mental representation of more abstract concepts like happiness or sadness by grounding them into bodily experiences in the vertical space [1,2].

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