Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling

The goal of this paper is to provide an example of how multidimensional scaling (MDS) can be used for stimuli development. The study described in this paper illustrates this process by developing affective mental imagery stimuli using the circumplex model of affect as a guide. The...

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Main Author: Matthew J. Facciani
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université d'Ottawa 2015-06-01
Series:Tutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.tqmp.org/RegularArticles/vol11-2/p113/p113.pdf
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spelling doaj-994ce52fb9994d0ca5a867de95cb0fd82020-11-24T23:44:51ZengUniversité d'OttawaTutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology1913-41262015-06-01112113125Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional ScalingMatthew J. Facciani0University of South CarolinaThe goal of this paper is to provide an example of how multidimensional scaling (MDS) can be used for stimuli development. The study described in this paper illustrates this process by developing affective mental imagery stimuli using the circumplex model of affect as a guide. The circumplex model of affect argues that all emotions can be described in terms of two underlying primary dimensions: valence and arousal (Russel, 1980). We used MDS to determine if affective mental imagery stimuli obtained from verbal prompts could be separated by arousal and valence to create four distinct categories (high –positive, low-positive, high-negative, and low-negative) as seen in other stimuli. 60 students from the University of South Carolina participated in the first experiment to evaluate three sets of stimuli. After being analyzed using MDS, selected stimuli were then assessed again in a second experiment to validate their robust valence and arousal distinctions. The second experiment was conducted with 34 subjects to validate 40 of the best stimuli from experiment 1. It was found that mental imagery stimuli can produce a reliable affective response for the dimensions of valence and arousal and that MDS can be an effective tool for stimuli development.http://www.tqmp.org/RegularArticles/vol11-2/p113/p113.pdfmultidimensional scalingstimuli developmentmental imageryaffectSYSTAT
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Matthew J. Facciani
spellingShingle Matthew J. Facciani
Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
Tutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology
multidimensional scaling
stimuli development
mental imagery
affect
SYSTAT
author_facet Matthew J. Facciani
author_sort Matthew J. Facciani
title Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
title_short Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
title_full Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
title_fullStr Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
title_full_unstemmed Developing Affective Mental Imagery Stimuli with Multidimensional Scaling
title_sort developing affective mental imagery stimuli with multidimensional scaling
publisher Université d'Ottawa
series Tutorials in Quantitative Methods for Psychology
issn 1913-4126
publishDate 2015-06-01
description The goal of this paper is to provide an example of how multidimensional scaling (MDS) can be used for stimuli development. The study described in this paper illustrates this process by developing affective mental imagery stimuli using the circumplex model of affect as a guide. The circumplex model of affect argues that all emotions can be described in terms of two underlying primary dimensions: valence and arousal (Russel, 1980). We used MDS to determine if affective mental imagery stimuli obtained from verbal prompts could be separated by arousal and valence to create four distinct categories (high –positive, low-positive, high-negative, and low-negative) as seen in other stimuli. 60 students from the University of South Carolina participated in the first experiment to evaluate three sets of stimuli. After being analyzed using MDS, selected stimuli were then assessed again in a second experiment to validate their robust valence and arousal distinctions. The second experiment was conducted with 34 subjects to validate 40 of the best stimuli from experiment 1. It was found that mental imagery stimuli can produce a reliable affective response for the dimensions of valence and arousal and that MDS can be an effective tool for stimuli development.
topic multidimensional scaling
stimuli development
mental imagery
affect
SYSTAT
url http://www.tqmp.org/RegularArticles/vol11-2/p113/p113.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewjfacciani developingaffectivementalimagerystimuliwithmultidimensionalscaling
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