Structuration lines of the cognitive-emotional world of Ψ

Structuring lines of the cognitive-emotional world of Ψ

A situation

A small group of people, adults and children, enters the subway.
They are different: their skin, their face, their physique are Other.
Their language is Other
Their smell is Other
Their behavior is Other.

Reactions — This group can be percieved as

— a gang of well organized thieves ; people who will provoke incidents; assaulting other travelers => urgent fear
— refugees, probably needing help => solidarity
— potential terrorists – reminiscent of the terrorists seen on TV =>  reinforcement of an anxious mood
=> feeling threated
— nothing special => indifference

The Emotion syndrome

According to Scherer, any emotion can be analyzed in five « components » (or « systems ») (Scherer 1984a, p. 99):

a component of cognitive evaluation of the stimuli or situations;
a physiological component of activation;
a component of motor expression;
a component of draft of action and preparation of the behavior;
and a subjective component, or “feeling”.

These last four components are traditional.

 “Situation”, “Stimuli”

External source of emotion

Situation = the world-around-the-experiencer
Stimuli = the situation (world-around-the-experiencer) as perceived-analyzed-understood by the experiencer
=>       as the world « experienced” by the experiencer.
=>       as the world described and told by the experiencer
=>       as the world the speaker wants to share with the other participants

External sources as a montage elaborated from the surrounding world.
Montage
: the technique of selecting, editing, and piecing together separate sections of film to form a continuous whole.

Internal source of emotion

Internal sources can be any kind of mental montage

An anecdote told by Léonore Quéffélec daughter of Brigitte Engerer
Brigitte Engerer was giving a masterclass
A student wanted to play the second concerto of Rakhmaninov.
BE threw the partition in her face.

As a student, BE was deeply impressed by one of her teachers, who died while  playing the second concerto of Rakhmaninov.
BE never played this concerto.

The cognitive component of the emotion syndrome

The detailed introduction of a cognitive evaluation component opens up very interesting perspectives.

— This component concerns practically all emotions:
There are hardly any emotional states that do not presuppose a significant number of cognitive processes
(Scherer 1993/1984, p. 107).

— It « guarantees a permanent control of internal and external stimuli »,
and assesses « whether they are harmful or useful for the organism« 
by relating them to the individual’s « needs, plans or preferences« 
(id., p. 103; p. 110; p. 101).

— This component is of central importance to the processing of emotion because
the nature of the emotion seems to be determined primarily by the cognitive processes of evaluation (id., p. 114).

The Facets of the Cognitive Component         

Scherer gives two variants of his cognitive appraisal system (id., p. 115; p. 129; we have introduced the facet numbering).

Scherer, K. R. (1984a): «Les émotions: Fonctions et composantes». Cahiers de psychologie cognitive. 4. 9-39. Repris dans B. Rimé, K. Scherer (éds), 1993 Les émotions. Neuchâtel, Delachaux et Niestlé. (1e éd. 1989). 97-133.

Scherer, K. R. (1984b): « On the Nature and function of emotion: A component process approach ». In Scherer, K. R., Ekman P., (eds) 1984, Approaches to emotion. Hillsdale, N. J., Lawrenbce Erlbaum. 293-317.

The following table merges the two tables.

Table 1: Facets of the cognitive component

F1 Event intervention Timing, expectation, probability, predictability
F2 Evaluation of the action / outcome of the event Intrinsic agreeableness, importance of the goal, significance for goal achievement, legitimacy
F3 Inference about the cause of the event Identity of the agent, motive/origin, legitimacy
F4 Assessment of potential of control Potential to influence the event or its consequences – potential for power to dominate its effects
F5 Comparison with external or internal standards Conformity to cultural expectations or norms
Consistency with real and/or ideal self image.
F6 Consequences for self gain/loss of life, health, material goods,
relationships, status, self-esteem, time experiences
F7 Expectations plans coming true/not true, role/norm demands satisfied/not satisfied
F8 Durations of effects short/long term, permanent, periodic
F9 Type of activity achievement-task transport, socio-emotional, leisure, service, basic drives, observation
F10 Location of event nature, street, institutions, home
F11 Agent of effect natural forces, society, groups, individual, self, object
F12 Relationship to agent intimacy, attitude, status
F13 Action of agent chance, type of intention, role/norm demands.

Discussion:

— These facets are actually interdependant.

— What is an “event”? Something salient – Diverging from the scenario of the current action in which the experiencer is actually / feels involved.

Table 2: Facets of the cognitive component 

The following table is a re-writing of the preceding one, integrating the following contributions:
—Rhetorical rules of dramatization of speech: (Lausberg, 1971; 1973)
— Rules for the construction of media discourse: « Emotion and emotional language in English and German news stories » (Ungerer 1995; 1997)
— Pragmatics of emotionive communication: « Towards a pragmatics of emotive communication » (Caffi & Janney, 1994; Caffi, 2000)


Facets of emotional structuration of the world of the experiencer


I — Evaluating what happens

Global evaluation of the event
Interjections: evaluating without Naming-Framing

II — Name and Frame what happens: What?

 Framing principle : Relationship to Ψ “/(/Ψ)”

 Framing tool: Analogy: Like what?

Specific Framing Lines of the event (/Ψ)

Framing the participants: Who?
Frame the timeline: When?
Framing the space :Where?
Framing the causal machinery : Cause-Effect-Control

Causality, Agency
Effect and consequences
Control

 


The emotional potential of a description of a situation can be evaluated at two levels, the first corresponding to a general orientation towards an affect, the second to a more specific orientation towards a particular emotion or a particular mood.

  1. Synthetic evaluation of the event

 Positioning of the event on the pleasure / displeasure axis

 — «Evaluation of the action or of the outcome of the event in terms of intrinsinc agreeableness» (Scherer)
— «Evaluation» (Caffi et Janney)

Psychological categories Linguistic categories Main contrast
evaluation evaluation positive / negative

— «Principle of emotional evaluation» (Ungerer):

Provide evaluations based on the norms of your culture Commenting adverbs, lexical items with positive/negative connotations

Evaluation

An evaluation is a set of reactions or operations leading to the attribution of a value (aesthetic, moral (a good action), pragmatic (a good knife) to an object, a person, a situation, an action

The evaluation can be expressed

— By a reaction of the whole body to an event (reaction of rejection / openness), accompanied by semi-linguistic vocal production: yes / no

— By a physical reaction:

approaching    /        retreating movement
taking              /       throwing

— By an interjection

ew, ew, ugh / hmm!
berk,beuûrk, pouah             /      hmm!

Through this primary reaction, the event is « placed » on the evaluative axis by a reflexive movement, accompanied by minimal linguistic productions.

The evaluation can be made explicit verbally by an evaluative predicate

pleasure / pain
pleasant / unpleasant
true / false
good / bad
good / bad
beautiful / ugly
it’s great / it’s unacceptable

 

It can be accompanied by an explicit emotional declaration:

it’s unpleasant / it’s pleasant,
I’m disgusted / I’m on cloud nine

 

The evaluation can be deferred in other cases, where it is no longer a reflex, no longer obvious. Then the evaluastion is constructed through a long linguistic and cognitive work composing of data coming from all the axes of categorization of the emotion, and leading to an evaluative conclusion like

Finally, in fact, on reflection, all this is extremely positive and even pleasant + blooming face and opening mimic

 

The evaluation can be made by any actor involved in the event, including the narrator.
producing conflicting evaluations

In an extended interaction, the emotional evaluation is repeated, carried out at several levels. It is the point of convergence of a series of co-oriented phenomena.


(ii) Framing principle: Relationship to Ψ

Overhanging parameter : “/(/Ψ)” — A parameter which combines with every others

Expectations Goals plans coming true/not true, role/norm
demands satisfied/not satisfiedsignificance for goal achievement, legitimacy
 
Relationship to Ψ

 

Consequences for self? gain/loss of life, health, material goods,
relationships, status, self-esteem, time experiences
   
Experiencer’s standards?

internal / estersnal

Conformity to cultural expectations or norms
Consistency with real and/or ideal self image.

 

F2 Evaluation of the action / outcome of the event Intrinsic agreeableness, importance of the goal, significance for goal achievement, legitimacy
F5 Comparison with external or internal standards Conformity to cultural expectations or norms
Consistency with real and/or ideal self image.
F6 Consequences for self gain/loss of life, health, material goods,
relationships, status, self-esteem, time experiences
F7 Expectations plans coming true/not true, role/norm demands satisfied/not satisfied
F12 Relationship to agent intimacy, attitude, status

 

Norms

Emotions are fundamentally shaped by values and interests.

The emotion attached to an event affecting an experiencer varies in quantity and quality depending on how that event affects its value system.

With the exception of innate reflex emotions, such as the fear induced in the duckling by the shadow of the raptor; or the cold sweat of the motorist who has just escaped from the accident).

Given an unknown experiencer receiving a news or facing an event, nothing can be said about the intensity and nature of the emotion felt by this subject, if any.

At most, we can expect it to be consistent with the emotion socially attached to that kind of news or events.

 

Let’s suppose that an individual finds himself in front of another dead person, or that he is told « So-and-so is dead ». His feeling depends totally on the relation he had with the dead person. If it an enemy, he may feel pity (“war is a terrible thing” or joy, (« one less bastard« ) consecutive to the end of his fear, or a warlike exaltation (« now I am the strongest! »).
In such a situation, the principle of complementarity of the emotions applies: « the happiness of some makes the misfortune of others« .

If it is a stranger, perhaps fright, or pity, or simply indifference, if the scene takes place in time of war. If it is a loved one, fright, despair, sadness, depression or other feelings associated with grief.

If it is your child, the reaction may be the same, but also something like pride: « my son is a hero, a martyr, a saint » – or so it is sometimes said. T

In any case, the emotion felt may differ from the stereotypical emotion given in the official definition of the situation.

(iii) Framing Tool : Naming-and-categorizing — Analogy

Identity = same key feature

Categorical analogy = same kind of beings, same name, same emotion

Structural analogy = same kind of events, —, —

Metaphor

 

 

Framing the event

 

Categorization processes

— of the event itself
— of the participants

(iv) Global Framing

 

Emotion is produced according to the name and category given to the event as a whole, as well as the name and category attributed to each of its components.

 

The designation of certain events refers to euphoric / dysphoric preconstructs

life drive/death drive

wedding / funeral,

attack / party

 

Such designations immediately position the event on the negative or positive zone of the pleasure/displeasure axis.

This positioning is done by default, that is, it can be modified by circumstantial considerations. For some participants, a wedding can be sad and a funeral an exciting event.

 

In addition to the emotions integrated into linguistic pre-constructs, the inventory of emotional data includes all the antecedent reports which, in ordinary social relations, triggers emotion (Cosnier 1994, Chapter 3; Scherer, Walbott, Summerfield, 1986).

 

The nature of this data is obviously culture-bound.

 

At the limit, the mimesic emotion is produced by making the reader hallucinate the scene.

 

In the article ‘evidence’ in his Dictionary of Rhetoric, Molinié mentions

that famous and ridiculous suppression of the screen of discourse, with the idea that the listener is transformed into a spectator’ (1992, p. 145);

 

there is obviously a difference between taking part in the battle and reading a war novel, but it remains to account, for example, for the hallucinatory effect of the narrative.

— Specific framing lines

(v) Participants: Who?

 

This category takes up Ungerer’s « Principle of rank ». For an « equal » event, the emotion varies with the identity of the people (or sentient beings) affected, some people being emotionally more « sensitive » than others to the same event. With the same degree of proximity (kinship), the death of a child affects « more » than that of an old man, that of a civilian « more » than that of a soldier. « Winning the jackpot » does not evoke the same feelings depending on whether it affects « a bigwig » or « a family whose father is unemployed ». « A tramp/gangster is found murdered » induces very different feelings, indignation in one case, perplexity or delight in the other (see Study 3).

People can be categorized as

acquaintances, relatives, loved ones, neighbors / foreigners

 

 

 

(vi) Time line: When?

 

Time? When? — Timing of the event  Past / present/ future
Before / Now / after
Probability,

Predictability, expectation,

Probable / Unlikely ?

Expected / unexpected ?

 

According to their temporal – aspectual construction, events are excluded or included in the subjective temporal sphere of the person:

at the very moment I am talking to you… VS  now it is all over.

 

The temporal dimension is essential in the construction of urgency as well as surprise, a component of any emotion.

This category corresponds to Scherer’s F1 facet, and also refers to the rhetorical techniques of chronography.

 

(vii)  Space: Where?

 

Where? — Location of event?

— Distance to the experiencer?

— nature, street, institutions, home

— near / far

 

Place?

The place where the emotional event occurs can be emotionally marked

murder in an empty lot vs. murder in the cathedral

 

It can be marked in relation to a given person (he was found lying in your office).

 

This category corresponds to Scherer’s F10 facet, and also refers to the rhetorical techniques of topography. Its subjectivization refers to Ungerer’s « Principle of proximity ».

Overall, the categories of place and time reconstruct the event according to the spatio-temporal coordinates of the target person.

 

Distance

Emotions varies in kind and intensity with the distance of the event from the experiencer. The term is to be taken in the material sense, near / far:

These tragic events take place in Srebrenica / somewhere in the Balkans / two hours by plane from Paris.

 

but also in the sense of intimacy (intimacy, involvment, solidarity)

it is a question of financial mathematics / this concerns us all

 

Thi corresponds to the F12 facet of Scherer, but also to elements entering the « control » dimension of Caffi and Janney. T

Les modalités introduites par rapport au thème du dire ou à la relation interviennent également dans sa définition (Caffi 2000).

 

— Framing the causal machinery

 

(v) Agency
Identification of the Cause or Agent

 

Agency =Agent-Causality

Agent-Causality is the idea that agents can start new causal chains that are not pre-determined by the events of the immediate or distant past and the physical laws of nature

 

Inference about the cause of the event          Identity of the agent, motive/origin, legitimacy

Who / What : identification of the agent

What?
Natural phenomenon
cause
Agency?
self
— Intentional action: motive /origin, legitimacy
other type of intention, role/norm demands.
Who? Human agent
— Non-intentional

 

This essential category refers to Scherer’s F3 and F11 facets.

The determination of a cause or agent influences emotional attitudes towards an event. In particular, it is at the origin of the variations in emotions linked to the attribution of responsibility.

The street accident is due to fatality (« a landslide« ) or to a deliberate act (« a drunk driver without a license ran into them« ); there is adness and sorrow in the first case, anger in the second.

 

Depending on whether one attributes to the desertification of the countryside an abstract cause (« the climate crisis, the European Common Agricultural Policy« ) or agents (« the European Commissioners« ), one builds resignation or political indignation (see Study 2).

 

« Peter terrorizes Paul » induces something like indignation towards Peter, whereas « Peter terrifies Paul » may earn him pity, if Peter is a Quasimodo (see Chapter 8).

 

 

 

Effect and consequences

 

Effects? Durations of effects short/long term, permanent, periodic

 

Consequences for self? gain/loss of life, health, material goods,
relationships, status, self-esteem, time experiences

 

This category corresponds to Scherer’s F6, F7 and F8 facets.

For example, in order to orient a person’s emotional attitude towards fear (constructing fear), we can show him, by means of a schema similar to that of an argument by consequences, that the negative consequences of such and such an event being frightening, so is the source.

 

Control?

For an individual, the emotion associated with an event varies with his or her ability to control that event. If the development of a fear-provoking state of affairs is out of control, the fear becomes panic.

 

Caffi and Janney

Linguistic categories Main contrast
proximity near / far
control specificity clear / vague
evidentiality confident / doubtful
volitionality assertive / non assertive

 

The « control » category of corresponds to the F4 facet of Scherer. For an individual, the emotion associated with an event varies with his or her ability to control that event. If the development of a fear-provoking state of affairs is out of control, the fear becomes panic.