| Literature DB >> 25379243 |
Katharina Sass1, Karolina Fetz2,3, Sarah Oetken2,3, Ute Habel2,3, Stefan Heim2,3,4,5.
Abstract
The present study introduces "Emotional Verbal Fluency" as a novel (partially computerized) task, which is aimed to investigate the interaction between emotionally loaded words and executive functions. Verbal fluency tasks are thought to measure executive functions but the interaction with emotional aspects is hardly investigated. In the current study, a group of healthy subjects (n = 21, mean age 25 years, 76% females) were asked to generate items that are either part of a semantic category (e.g., plants, toys, vehicles; standard semantic verbal fluency) or can trigger the emotions joy, anger, sadness, fear and disgust. The results of the task revealed no differences between performance on semantic and emotional categories, suggesting a comparable task difficulty for healthy subjects. Hence, these first results on the comparison between semantic and emotional verbal fluency seem to highlight that both might be suitable for examining executive functioning. However, an interaction was found between the category type and repetition (first vs. second sequence of the same category) with larger performance decrease for semantic in comparison to emotional categories. Best performance overall was found for the emotional category "joy" suggesting a positivity bias in healthy subjects. To conclude, emotional verbal fluency is a promising approach to investigate emotional components in an executive task, which may stimulate further research, especially in psychiatric patients who suffer from emotional as well as cognitive deficits.Entities:
Keywords: emotion; emotion-cognition interaction; executive functions; semantic; verbal fluency
Year: 2013 PMID: 25379243 PMCID: PMC4217594 DOI: 10.3390/bs3030372
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Error classification.
| Type of Error | Explanation | Example | Scoring |
|---|---|---|---|
| (1) Items are not matching the category | The stated item cannot be considered a category member | ‘Jungle’ as a response to the semantic category ‘plants’ | Item is excluded (error) |
| (2) Items do not exist | The stated item cannot be found in the German dictionary * | ‘Passion fruit-tree’ as response to the semantic category ‘plants’ | Item is excluded (error) |
| (3a) Repetition within the same task sequence | An item is stated twice during responding to a category | - | Item is only counted once as correct (repetition) |
| (3b) Item represents a superordinate category of other items | One stated item can be considered as a superordinate category of other stated items, which are subordinates | ‘Tree’ in response to the semantic category ‘plants’; than naming different kind of trees, e.g., ‘linden’, ‘oak tree’ | Superordinate item is excluded; subordinate items are counted as correct (repetition or repetition between task sequence) |
| (4) Repetition between task sequences | In the second sequence, an item is stated, which has already been mentioned in the first sequence in response to the same category | ‘Laugh’ in response to the emotional category ‘joy’ on both the first and the second task sequence | Item is excluded on the second task sequence (repetition between task sequence) |
Notes: * Dudenredaktion (Hrsg.): Duden 01. Die deutsche Rechtschreibung. 25.Auflage. Band 1, Bibliographisches Institut (Dudenverlag), Mannheim/Wien/Zürich 2009.
Error and repetition rates per overall category.
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| 3.26% | 0.29% | 2.05% |
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| 3.97% | 2.29% | 3.29% |
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| 2.61% | 2.48% | 2.56% |
Mean number of produced items (raw and corrected data) per category and sequence.
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| Comparison of sequence effects within category | |||||
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| 15.16 (2.13) | 9.70 (1.52) | 5.47 (1.14) | 51.53 (7.31) | 32.91 (5.17) | 18.62 (3.90) | |
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| 10.69 (2.59) | 6.43 (1.53) | 4.26 (1.46) | 49.89 (12.20) | 30.03 (7.14) | 19.86 (6.95) | |
Mean number of items (per task sequence and in total; raw and corrected data) and standard deviations.
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| 10.71 (1.90) | 5.52 (1.69) | 16.24 (2.10) | 36.68 (6.51) | 18.91 (5.79) | 55.59 (7.17) |
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| 10.90 (2.39) | 5.33 (1.96) | 16.24 (2.39) | 33.04 (7.23) | 16.16 (5.93) | 49.20 (7.22) |
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| 10.10 (2.34) | 7.24 (2.53) | 17.33 (4.42) | 35.01 (8.13) | 25.10 (8.77) | 60.11 (15.33) |
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| 8.33 (2.44) | 4.43 (2.04) | 12.76 (3.6) | 30.52 (8.92) | 16.22 (7.47) | 46.74 (13.20) |
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| 8.43 (2.16) | 4.81 (2.52) | 13.24 (3.49) | 29.31 (7.50) | 16.72 (8.77) | 46.03 (12.14) |
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| 5.48 (1.78) | 3.81 (2.23) | 9.29 (3.64) | 28.02 (9.10) | 19.49 (11.40) | 47.51 (18.60) |
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| 6.76 (1.92) | 4.71 (1.68) | 11.48 (3.01) | 29.46 (8.37) | 20.54 (7.31) | 50.00 (13.11) |
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| 7.71 (2.43) | 5.67 (2.06) | 13.38 (3.5) | 35.07 (11.06) | 25.76 (9.35) | 60.83 (15.91) |
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| 6.38 (2.09) | 3.90 (1.97) | 10.29 (3.52) | 29.49 (9.64) | 18.05 (9.12) | 47.54 (16.28) |
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| 5.81 (2.42) | 3.19 (2.29) | 9.00 (4.01) | 28.12 (11.71) | 15.44 (11.10) | 43.56 (19.42) |
Notes: raw number of correct items x mean number of syllables for each category = corrected items/SD = standard deviation.
Within category comparison for semantics.
| Comparison | 1st sequence | 2nd sequence | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| toys > weapons | 3.27 | 0.005 | n.s. | n.s. |
| toys > tools | 3.31 | 0.005 | n.s. | n.s. |
| plants > vehicles | n.s. | n.s. | 4.03 | 0.001 |
| plants > weapons | 2.11 | 0.05 | 3.55 | 0.005 |
| plants > tools | 2.97 | 0.01 | 3.27 | 0.005 |
| plants > toys | n.s. | n.s. | 2.78 | 0.05 |
| vehicles > tools | 2.51 | 0.05 | n.s. | n.s. |
Notes: n.s. = not significant.
Within category comparison for emotions.
| Comparison | 1st sequence | 2nd sequence | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| joy > anger | 2.64 | 0.05 | 2.60 | 0.05 |
| joy > fear | 2.98 | 0.01 | 2.23 | 0.05 |
| joy > disgust | 2.60 | 0.05 | 3.21 | 0.005 |
| joy > sadness | 2.37 | 0.05 | 3.77 | 0.001 |
| fear > sadness | n.a. | n.a. | 2.24 | 0.05 |
Brief content analysis of produced items.
| Toys | Vehicles | Plants | Weapons | Tools | |
| > 25 % (at least 5 from 21 subjects) | -Car | -Excavator | -Apple tree | -Ax | -Ax |
| > 50 % (at least 11 of 21 subjects) | -Ball | -Car | -Grass | -Rifle | -Saw |
| > 75 % (at least 16 of 21 subjects) | n.a. | -Bicycle | -Rose | -Knife | -Drill |
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| > 25 % (at least 5 from 21 subjects) | -Trouble | -Loneliness | -Appreciation | -Disease | -Loneliness |
| > 50 % (at least 11 of 21 subjects) | n.a. | -Darkness | -Benefit/victory | -(specific) Food | -Funeral |
| > 75 % (at least 16 of 21 subjects) | n.a. | n.a. | -Presents | -Dirt | -Death |