Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives
Research on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inqu...
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Manusya Journal of Humanities
2022
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my.unimas.ir.406292023-10-11T01:55:46Z http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40629/ Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives Monica Kah Pei, Liaw Ting, Su Hie Kee Man, Chuah Collin, Jerome P Philology. Linguistics Research on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations of Research on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations ofResearch on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations ofResearch on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations oftheir denial of the diagnosis and explanations of treatment. Frequently used positive affective words reflect their optimism after reaching acceptance. Frequently used negative affective words indicate their trauma and uncertainty about the prognosis and treatment. Linguistic indicators of emotional and cognitive processes may be useful in identifying stages of coping so that appropriate support can be given to cancer patients and survivors. Manusya Journal of Humanities 2022 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40629/5/Affective.pdf Monica Kah Pei, Liaw and Ting, Su Hie and Kee Man, Chuah and Collin, Jerome (2022) Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives. Manusya Journal of Humanities, 25. pp. 1-23. ISSN 2665-9077. https://brill.com/view/journals/mnya/25/1/article-p1_012.xml?rskey=1o6RDh&result=1 doi:10.1163/26659077-25020013 |
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P Philology. Linguistics Monica Kah Pei, Liaw Ting, Su Hie Kee Man, Chuah Collin, Jerome Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
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Research on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective
and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software
revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used
words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations of Research on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive
processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of
the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations ofResearch on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations ofResearch on cancer narratives has not contextualised emotional and cognitive processes in stages of coping. The study examined linguistic indicators of affective
and cognitive processes in narratives of 31 Malaysian cancer survivors. The analysis of the 58,787-word transcript using Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (liwc) software
revealed that coping with cancer is a case of mind over emotions, with 12.52% of words related to cognitive processes and 4.17% to affective processes. Frequently used
words linked to cognitive processes indicated the cancer survivors’ rationalisations oftheir denial of the diagnosis and explanations of treatment. Frequently used positive
affective words reflect their optimism after reaching acceptance. Frequently used negative affective words indicate their trauma and uncertainty about the prognosis
and treatment. Linguistic indicators of emotional and cognitive processes may be useful in identifying stages of coping so that appropriate support can be given to
cancer patients and survivors. |
format |
Article |
author |
Monica Kah Pei, Liaw Ting, Su Hie Kee Man, Chuah Collin, Jerome |
author_facet |
Monica Kah Pei, Liaw Ting, Su Hie Kee Man, Chuah Collin, Jerome |
author_sort |
Monica Kah Pei, Liaw |
title |
Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
title_short |
Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
title_full |
Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
title_fullStr |
Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
title_full_unstemmed |
Affective and Cognitive Processes in Cancer Narratives |
title_sort |
affective and cognitive processes in cancer narratives |
publisher |
Manusya Journal of Humanities |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40629/5/Affective.pdf http://ir.unimas.my/id/eprint/40629/ https://brill.com/view/journals/mnya/25/1/article-p1_012.xml?rskey=1o6RDh&result=1 |
_version_ |
1779443471823667200 |