A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students

The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) was developed in an attempt to provide a standardised tool to elicit and measure emotions for research purposes. The IAPS is unique, in that it is completely pictorially based. An emotional response is stimulated by the pictures, which are then used...

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Main Author: Oettlé, Ryan Andrew
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10948/13087
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-nmmu-vital-271512017-12-21T04:22:31ZA cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university studentsOettlé, Ryan AndrewEmotions -- Cross-cultural studiesEmotive (Linguistics)The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) was developed in an attempt to provide a standardised tool to elicit and measure emotions for research purposes. The IAPS is unique, in that it is completely pictorially based. An emotional response is stimulated by the pictures, which are then used to measure the emotional response. This has obvious benefits in South Africa. The overall aim of this study was to conduct a cross-cultural exploration of the IAPS, with a sample of South African university students, in order to come to an initial understanding of the measure’s performance within the South African context. A quantitative methodology was used, in order to reach the research aim and objectives. The overall research approach was exploratory and descriptive in nature and the actual data gathering consisted of a single measurement instance. The procedure for this study was based on that used by the developers of the IAPS to norm the instrument. Convenience sampling was used, resulting in a total sample of 169 participants, 31 male, and 136 female. For analysis purposes, participants were grouped according to a race and language combination, thus operationalising ethnicity. This resulted in four primary ethnic groupings. In summary, it was found that a large number of items seem to travel well in terms of equivalence. The correlations achieved and affective space plot are consistent with that outlined in the IAPS instruction manual, and are similar to international studies using the same procedure. However, when items were examined in greater detail, statistically significant differences raised concerns about the level of equivalence and suggested that not all items travel equally well. Similarly, although many items were statistically similar between the South African ethnic groups, differences were also found on specific items.Nelson Mandela Metropolitan UniversityFaculty of Health Sciences2016ThesisMastersMAix, 313 leavespdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10948/13087vital:27151EnglishNelson Mandela Metropolitan University
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Emotions -- Cross-cultural studies
Emotive (Linguistics)
spellingShingle Emotions -- Cross-cultural studies
Emotive (Linguistics)
Oettlé, Ryan Andrew
A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
description The International Affective Picture System (IAPS) was developed in an attempt to provide a standardised tool to elicit and measure emotions for research purposes. The IAPS is unique, in that it is completely pictorially based. An emotional response is stimulated by the pictures, which are then used to measure the emotional response. This has obvious benefits in South Africa. The overall aim of this study was to conduct a cross-cultural exploration of the IAPS, with a sample of South African university students, in order to come to an initial understanding of the measure’s performance within the South African context. A quantitative methodology was used, in order to reach the research aim and objectives. The overall research approach was exploratory and descriptive in nature and the actual data gathering consisted of a single measurement instance. The procedure for this study was based on that used by the developers of the IAPS to norm the instrument. Convenience sampling was used, resulting in a total sample of 169 participants, 31 male, and 136 female. For analysis purposes, participants were grouped according to a race and language combination, thus operationalising ethnicity. This resulted in four primary ethnic groupings. In summary, it was found that a large number of items seem to travel well in terms of equivalence. The correlations achieved and affective space plot are consistent with that outlined in the IAPS instruction manual, and are similar to international studies using the same procedure. However, when items were examined in greater detail, statistically significant differences raised concerns about the level of equivalence and suggested that not all items travel equally well. Similarly, although many items were statistically similar between the South African ethnic groups, differences were also found on specific items.
author Oettlé, Ryan Andrew
author_facet Oettlé, Ryan Andrew
author_sort Oettlé, Ryan Andrew
title A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
title_short A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
title_full A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
title_fullStr A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
title_full_unstemmed A cross-cultural exploration of the International Affective Picture System in a sample of South African university students
title_sort cross-cultural exploration of the international affective picture system in a sample of south african university students
publisher Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10948/13087
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