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Film clips and narrative text as subjective emotion elicitation techniques

journal contribution
posted on 2018-06-13, 00:00 authored by Barbra ZupanBarbra Zupan, DR Babbage
© 2017 Taylor & Francis. techniques in eliciting emotion in a laboratory setting but have not been examined side-by-side using the same methodology. This study examined the self-identification of emotions elicited by film clip and narrative text stimuli to confirm that selected stimuli appropriately target the intended emotions. Seventy participants viewed 30 film clips, and 40 additional participants read 30 narrative texts. Participants identified the emotion experienced (happy, sad, angry, fearful, neutral—six stimuli each). Eighty-five percent of participants self-identified the target emotion for at least two stimuli for all emotion categories of film clips, except angry (only one) and for all categories of narrative text, except fearful (only one). The most effective angry text was correctly identified 74% of the time. Film clips were more effective in eliciting all target emotions in participants for eliciting the correct emotion (angry), intensity rating (happy, sad), or both (fearful). Film clips and narrative text are useful

Funding

Other

History

Volume

157

Issue

2

Start Page

194

End Page

210

Number of Pages

7

eISSN

1940-1183

ISSN

0022-4545

Publisher

Psychology Press, USA

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2016-06-07

External Author Affiliations

Auckland University of Technology

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Journal of Social Psychology