@article{oai:saigaku.repo.nii.ac.jp:00001181, author = {五島, 史子 and GOTOH, Fumiko}, journal = {埼玉学園大学紀要. 人間学部篇, Bulletin of Saitama Gakuen University. Faculty of Humanities}, month = {Dec}, note = {The present survey studied the relationship between arousal and affective valence in affective two-compound kanji words. 111 students worked on a list of 389 words that had been rated for valence in Gotoh and Ohta (2001). Participants indicated on a 7-point Likert scale from 1 (low) to 7 (high) the arousal (Please judge for each word how much it gives you physical or emotional excitation) from each of 122 negative (e.g., crisis, weapon), 121 neutral (e.g., ticket, member), and 146 positive words (e.g., friendship, courage). Mean arousal levels were 3.3, 2.4, and 3.6 for negative, neutral, and positive words, respectively, reflecting a partial dissociation of arousal and valence. I discuss the processing differences between the affective valence of and arousal from words in terms of behavioral science and neuroscience.}, pages = {195--206}, title = {感情語(漢字二字熟語)の覚醒度調査 : 感情価と覚醒度の差異について}, volume = {18}, year = {2018}, yomi = {ゴトウ, フミコ} }