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Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Cognitive Psychology Of Humour In Written Puns, James Boylan
The Cognitive Psychology Of Humour In Written Puns, James Boylan
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
The primary purpose of this dissertation was to investigate how humour from written puns is produced. Prior models have emphasized that novel or surprising incongruities should be important to humour appreciation (Suls, 1972; Topolinski, 2014). In study 1, a new approach to operationalizing incongruity as semantic dissimilarity was developed and tested using Latent Semantic Analysis (Landauer, Foltz & Laham, 1998). “Latent semantic incongruity” was associated with humour ratings, but only for puns with low ratings of familiarity from a prior occasion or for those with a low level of aggressive content. Overall, there was also an unexpected strong positive association …
The Effects Of Perceptual Fluency On Emotional Word Recognition, Joseph M. Nidel
The Effects Of Perceptual Fluency On Emotional Word Recognition, Joseph M. Nidel
Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
To investigate if making a word harder to read attenuates emotional influences like valence and arousal, we used a sample of Warriner and colleagues’ (2013) corpus with valence and arousal norms, a font manipulation from the perceptual fluency paradigm, and a word naming task. We found that, contrary to our hypotheses, emotional influences of words on RT were not attenuated in the disfluent condition; in fact, disfluency seemed to amplify the facilitative effects of high arousal. These results suggest that models of word recognition should consider the role that emotions play in recognition. They also provide limited support to models …