Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people

This article reports results from a study of perceived emotion portrayal in cartoons by different groups of subjects. A set of audiovisual stimuli was selected through a procedure in two steps. First, 6 ‘judges’ evaluated a large number of random snippets from all Mickey Mouse cartoons released betw...

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Main Author: Lindborg, PerMagnus
Other Authors: School of Art, Design and Media
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2010
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/91845
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/6299
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-918452019-12-06T18:12:58Z Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people Lindborg, PerMagnus School of Art, Design and Media International Conference in Music Perception and Cognition (11th : 2010 : US) DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Music This article reports results from a study of perceived emotion portrayal in cartoons by different groups of subjects. A set of audiovisual stimuli was selected through a procedure in two steps. First, 6 ‘judges’ evaluated a large number of random snippets from all Mickey Mouse cartoons released between 1928 and -35. Analysis singled out the five films ranking highest in portraying respectively anger, sadness, fear, joy and love/tenderness. Subsequently, 4 judges made a continuous evaluation of emotion portrayal in these films, and six maximally unambiguous sequences were identified in each. The stimuli were presented to two groups (N=33), one in which the subjects were expected to be visually acute, and one where they would tend to be more aurally acute, in three different ways: bimodally (original) and unimodally, i.e as an isolated sound or video track. We investigated how group and modus conditions influenced the subjects’ perception of the relative intensity of the five emotions, as well as the sense of realism portrayed in the cartoon clips, and how amusing they were found to be. Finally, we developed an estimate for visual-aural orientation as a linear combination of select self-reported variables, and tested it as a predictor for the perception of medium dominance. Accepted version 2010-07-08T03:42:27Z 2019-12-06T18:12:58Z 2010-07-08T03:42:27Z 2019-12-06T18:12:58Z 2010 2010 Conference Paper Lindborg, P. (2010). Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people. International Conference in Music Perception and Cognition (ICMPC11) (11th: 2010: USA) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/91845 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/6299 154942 en 8 p. application/octet-stream application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Music
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Music
Lindborg, PerMagnus
Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
description This article reports results from a study of perceived emotion portrayal in cartoons by different groups of subjects. A set of audiovisual stimuli was selected through a procedure in two steps. First, 6 ‘judges’ evaluated a large number of random snippets from all Mickey Mouse cartoons released between 1928 and -35. Analysis singled out the five films ranking highest in portraying respectively anger, sadness, fear, joy and love/tenderness. Subsequently, 4 judges made a continuous evaluation of emotion portrayal in these films, and six maximally unambiguous sequences were identified in each. The stimuli were presented to two groups (N=33), one in which the subjects were expected to be visually acute, and one where they would tend to be more aurally acute, in three different ways: bimodally (original) and unimodally, i.e as an isolated sound or video track. We investigated how group and modus conditions influenced the subjects’ perception of the relative intensity of the five emotions, as well as the sense of realism portrayed in the cartoon clips, and how amusing they were found to be. Finally, we developed an estimate for visual-aural orientation as a linear combination of select self-reported variables, and tested it as a predictor for the perception of medium dominance.
author2 School of Art, Design and Media
author_facet School of Art, Design and Media
Lindborg, PerMagnus
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Lindborg, PerMagnus
author_sort Lindborg, PerMagnus
title Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
title_short Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
title_full Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
title_fullStr Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
title_full_unstemmed Perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
title_sort perception of emotion portrayal in cartoons by aurally and visually oriented people
publishDate 2010
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/91845
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/6299
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