AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explored the emotional concept of envy, comparing its representations in English (envy), Spanish (envidia), and German (Neid) through a prototype approach.
  • In Study 1, participants identified features associated with envy using open-ended questionnaires, and in Study 2, they rated how typical these features were.
  • The findings indicated that while there were shared central features among the concepts, there were also distinct peripheral features and structural differences between envy, envidia, and Neid, highlighting the effectiveness of combining prototype analysis with network analysis in studying emotions across cultures.

Article Abstract

Using a prototype approach to emotion concepts, we mapped the internal structure and content of the everyday concept of envy (as used in the United States) and its translation equivalents of envidia in Spanish and Neid in German. In Study 1 (total N = 415), the features of the concept of envy, envidia, and Neid were generated via an open-ended questionnaire. In Study 2 (total N = 404), participants rated the degree of typicality of the constitutive features on a forced-choice questionnaire. The prototype analysis of envy, supplemented with network analyses, revealed that the largest connected set of features of envy, envidia, and Neid shared a group of central features, including features related to success or to people with a better appearance. Still, envy, envidia, and Neid did differ with respect to their constituent peripheral features as well as the density of their networks, their structure, and the betweenness centrality of the nodes. These results suggest that a prototype approach combined with network analysis is a convenient approach for studying the internal structure of everyday emotion concepts and the degree of overlap with respect to the translation equivalents in different countries.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/sjop.12994DOI Listing

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