时间:2019-02-16 作者:英语课 分类:词汇大师(Wordmaster)


英语课

February 16, 2005


AA: I'm Avi Arditti with Rosanne Skirble, and this week on Wordmaster: words that express emotion.


RS: Suppose someone gave you two minutes to write down as many different emotions as you could think of -- for example: happy, sad, angry. You're also told to rate each emotion as "unpleasant," "neutral" or "pleasant." What would come to mind?


AA: That's what groups of English speakers in Chicago, and Spanish speakers in Mexico City, had to do for a study led by Robert Schrauf, a linguistics 1 professor at Penn State University.


ROBERT SCHRAUF: "So that data was available to me, and I began to analyze 2 it one day and found this rather curious difference. And that was that about 50 percent of the emotion words that people mentioned were negative, and about 30 percent positive and 20 percent neutral. And those proportions were consistent across all of these groups, from young Mexicans to older Mexicans in Mexico City and young to old English speakers in Chicago. For instance, here is the young Anglos', in order, the first five: happy, sad, angry, excited, afraid.


"Now what's curious about that list is, happy is positive. That's one word. Then there's sad, angry, afraid -- that's three negative -- and excited, which generally comes across to people as a neutral word."


RS: "What does this tell us, that 50 percent are negative, 30 percent are positive and 20 percent are neutral? What does this tell us about our emotions, or how we express ourselves?"


ROBERT SCHRAUF: "Right, so that's the curious thing. So you could look at that list and entertain a number of hypotheses. You could say, 'well, you know, human beings just have more negative experiences than positive ones, and therefore ... ' Or you might think that people take dour 3 views of things, I don't know. So what became interesting was how to explain this. And I went back to the literature and found that the theorizing about emotions is as follows:


"We tend to think that there are positive and negative emotions on a kind of a continuum. But both the behavioral and the neurophysiological literature suggest that actually there are two channels [in the brain] for processing emotions -- one negative and one positive.


"And what happens is, it seems to me -- or the explanation I'm taking from the literature -- is that we respond to negative emotions by thinking more carefully, in a more detailed 4 manner, and we respond to positive emotions by thinking more schematically. We tend to process those more facilely. So my response to a happy emotion is to sort of think top-down, to think that things are moving as they should in the world or perhaps a bit better.


"And that makes sense from an evolutionary 5 perspective. I mean, if there's danger or threat, then I need to pay a great deal of careful attention to that. If things are going OK, then it's benign 6; I can sort of move ahead."


RS: "I find it very interesting, the comparison across cultures in the studies that you reviewed."


ROBERT SCHRAUF: "Right, right. So let's say there are five to seven basic emotions which we'll find with appropriate emotion words present in all languages and all cultures. I mean, we would have to do an empirical study to find that, but the evidence that we've gathered so far tends to suggest that that's true. What makes cultures unique are all of those non-basic emotions that once you get through joy, anger, fear, sadness -- those initial very pan-cultural words and pan-cultural emotions -- then there are long lists of emotion words in each language that make rather curious distinctions that are not translatable.


"So an example in Spanish, for instance, is 'verguenza,' which we translate as 'shame.' But it's a far more powerful word than our word shame. Or for instance, in German, 'schadenfreude' is a word that implies a feeling of glee at someone else's misfortune, and we don't have an appropriate translation in English."


AA: Professor Robert Schrauf, speaking to us from the studios of WPSX at Penn State University. His report, written with researcher Julia Sanchez, can be found in the Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural 7 Development.


RS: That's all for Wordmaster this week. Our e-mail address is。。。。。。。And Internet users can download our reports, back to 1998, at voanews.com/wordmaster. With Avi Arditti, I'm Rosanne Skirble.


 



n.语言学
  • She plans to take a course in applied linguistics.她打算学习应用语言学课程。
  • Linguistics is a scientific study of the property of language.语言学是指对语言的性质所作的系统研究。
vt.分析,解析 (=analyse)
  • We should analyze the cause and effect of this event.我们应该分析这场事变的因果。
  • The teacher tried to analyze the cause of our failure.老师设法分析我们失败的原因。
adj.冷酷的,严厉的;(岩石)嶙峋的;顽强不屈
  • They were exposed to dour resistance.他们遭受到顽强的抵抗。
  • She always pretends to be dour,in fact,she's not.她总表现的不爱讲话,事实却相反。
adj.详细的,详尽的,极注意细节的,完全的
  • He had made a detailed study of the terrain.他对地形作了缜密的研究。
  • A detailed list of our publications is available on request.我们的出版物有一份详细的目录备索。
adj.进化的;演化的,演变的;[生]进化论的
  • Life has its own evolutionary process.生命有其自身的进化过程。
  • These are fascinating questions to be resolved by the evolutionary studies of plants.这些十分吸引人的问题将在研究植物进化过程中得以解决。
adj.善良的,慈祥的;良性的,无危险的
  • The benign weather brought North America a bumper crop.温和的气候给北美带来大丰收。
  • Martha is a benign old lady.玛莎是个仁慈的老妇人。
adj.融合多种文化的,多种文化的
  • Children growing up in a multicultural society.在多元文化社会中长大的孩子们。
  • The school has been attempting to bring a multicultural perspective to its curriculum.这所学校已经在尝试将一种多元文化视角引入其课程。
学英语单词
actual violence
alms bowl
alpinuss
Anemone nemorosa
arthro-onychodysplasia
autostairs
backcrossing
band clutch
betanaphthyl
bremmyll
car checking
Cartimandua
Chayefsky, Paddy
chorda tendinea
Congaree Swamp National Monument
continental brake hypothesis
cranial cartilage
cyclic load
diousands
downpression
DPN1
dram refresh
Dymenol
ecological disturbance
Eddystone Rocks
elastic fracture toughness limit
engine operation
erect cover
essentially complete class of decision rule
extracellular fluids
family bryaceaes
feel at
fishing permit
flash freezing
flos celosiae cristatae
floss candy
ganaxolone
gas recyclers and gas handling equipment
give of
harvy
hemoclip
hexagonal screw die
homology group of manifold
Horsens Fd.
initiation complex
inner punch
isoindoles
kadyrov
laslovich
lectureship
maniclike
masoods
melitin tests
memory enter
metal backed luminescent screen
meteoropathic reaction
missile transporting vehicle
most favored
motor inn
negatively charged
nephologies
New York
non-planar network
normalized cochain
off one's rocket
palaeomorphic
Parazoa
PERSCOM
phasing out of obsolete machinery
phenylurea
phosphorylating enzyme
photod
potential discount
PPI operator
principal congruence
pro-whaling
probabilistic testing
punditically
realis
receptation
reel and cable locomotive
retardarce
retention order
reversing damped condition
Roman bronze
secure arms
semi-apogamy
shear lag analysis
Spanish style
spark frequency
sprinkler pipe
system of conservation laws
template hinge
tenue mesenteriale intestinum
Three Estates (of the Realm)
token name
triphen-
two-stage experiment
upliftingly
villous synovitis
Witze
workboats