| Literature DB >> 31725733 |
Abstract
The experience of aesthetic chills, often defined as a subjective response accompanied by goosebumps, shivers and tingling sensations, is a phenomenon often utilized to indicate moments of peak pleasure and emotional arousal in psychological research. However, little is currently understood about how to conceptualize the experience, particularly in terms of whether chills are general markers of intense pleasure and emotion, or instead a collection of distinct phenomenological experiences. To address this, a web-study was designed using images, videos, music videos, texts and music excerpts (from both an online forum dedicated to chills-eliciting stimuli and previous musical chills study), to explore variations across chills experience in terms of bodily and emotional responses reported. Results suggest that across participants (N = 179), three distinct chills categories could be identified: warm chills (chills co-occurring with smiling, warmth, feeling relaxed, stimulated and happy), cold chills (chills co-occurring with frowning, cold, sadness and anger), and moving chills (chills co-occurring with tears, feeling a lump in the throat, emotional intensity, and feelings of affection, tenderness and being moved). Warm chills were linked to stimuli expressing social communion and love; cold chills were elicited by stimuli portraying entities in distress, and support from one to another; moving chills were elicited by most stimuli, but their incidence were also predicted by ratings of trait empathy. Findings are discussed in terms of being moved, the importance of differing induction mechanisms such as shared experience and empathic concern, and the implications of distinct chills categories for both individual differences and inconsistencies in the existing aesthetic chills literature.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31725733 PMCID: PMC6855651 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
The 15 stimuli used in the study; the thematic category labels are derived from a data-driven, agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis (see Data Analysis and Results sections).
| Stimulus | Modality | Thematic Category | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Video | School students performing the Haka at teacher’s funeral procession | ||
| Video | Dog and owner reunited after long separation | ||
| Video | Scientists celebrate landing of rocket | ||
| Music | Famous string theme from Gustav Holst | ||
| Music | Guitar solo from Steven Wilson | ||
| Music | Large crescendo from Sigur Rós | ||
| Music Video | Audience sings along to recording of Bohemian Rhapsody | ||
| Music Video | Fans sing to chorus of song, to performers’ surprise | ||
| Music Video | Man sings in empty shipping container | ||
| Image | Older man in distress walks alone during war memorial | ||
| Image | Man judged to be innocent after years of imprisonment | ||
| Image | Orphaned gorilla comforted by person | ||
| Text | Loving message from Father to son | ||
| Text | Quote from professor about caring for yourself | ||
| Text | Grateful message from recovering addict to paramedics |
Eta2 values for bodily activity data on the first three dimensions of the multiple correspondence analysis (medium to large correlations are marked in bold).
| Response | Dimension 1 | Dimension 2 | Dimension 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Smile | . | .01 | .02 |
| Warmth | . | .02 | .00 |
| Cold | . | .01 | .05 |
| Frown | . | .01 | .06 |
| Warmth in chest | .23 | .00 | .07 |
| Goosebumps | .04 | . | .00 |
| Shivers | .00 | . | .03 |
| Tingling | .01 | . | .00 |
| Lump in throat | .00 | .00 | . |
| Tears | .00 | .08 | . |
| Laughter | .12 | .05 | .04 |
| Breathing | .05 | .00 | .14 |
Fig 1Visualization of the Multiple Correspondence Analysis.
Shapes indicate physical (triangle) and emotional (circle) responses, and colours indicate chills categories developed through MCA and polyserial correlations (red = warm chills, blue = cold chills, purple = moving chills).
Polyserial correlations between main bodily activity variables from MCA, and emotional descriptors (medium to large positive correlations in bold text).
| Response | Smile | Warmth | Cold | Frown | Lump in throat | Tears |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Happy | . | . | -.54 | -.64 | -.08 | -.04 |
| Stimulated | . | .28 | -.14 | -.36 | .05 | -.03 |
| Relaxed | .24 | . | -.13 | -.19 | -.16 | -.25 |
| Sadness | -.64 | -.28 | . | . | . | . |
| Anger | -.41 | -.21 | . | . | .20 | .14 |
| Affection | .14 | . | -.11 | -.11 | . | . |
| Tender | .09 | .28 | -.01 | .02 | . | . |
| Moved | .02 | . | -.12 | -.08 | . | . |
| Intensity | -.02 | .16 | .03 | .02 | . | . |
| Energetic | . | .17 | -.09 | -.24 | -.08 | -.08 |
| Calm | .16 | .28 | -.16 | -.13 | -.01 | -.06 |
| Inspired | .16 | .24 | -.22 | -.22 | .13 | .07 |
| Melancholy | -.25 | -.08 | .21 | .21 | .20 | .17 |
| Nostalgia | .003 | .13 | -.10 | -.27 | .10 | .08 |
| Nervous | -.14 | -.09 | .25 | .10 | .02 | .06 |
Fig 2Full solution dendrogram from the agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis.
Red and blue branch colours indicate the two cluster solution representing positive and negative valence; smaller bar graphs indicate raw mean ratings for warm (red), cold (blue) and moving (purple) chills for each individual stimulus.
Likelihood ratio tests statistics and post-hoc comparisons, to assess effects of stimulus themes and trait empathy on warm, cold and moving chills (*** = p < .001, ** = p < .01, * = p < .05).
| Chills Category | Fixed Effects | Likelihood Ratio ( | Post-Hoc (Theme Comparisons) | z-statistic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 18.05*** | Distress and Support < Communion | -5.55*** | ||
| Love and Gratitude > Distress and Support | 5.06*** | |||
| Solo Voice and Instrument > Distress and Support | 4.43** | |||
| 2.42 | ||||
| 31.27*** | Distress and Support > Communion | 9.35*** | ||
| Love and Gratitude < Distress and Support | -9.37*** | |||
| Solo Voice and Instrument < Distress and Support | -8.16*** | |||
| 0.55 | ||||
| 8.54* | Solo Voice and Instrument < Distress and Support | -3.13* | ||
| 4.51* |