The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity

Hearing swear words or taboo words causes us discomfort. Research suggests that emotional responses caused by such words are stronger when the words are spoken in the listener’s first language (L1), rather than their second language (L2). We attempt to replicate these findings with a perceptual expe...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anastasija Rastovic, Maud Pélissier, Emmanuel Ferragne
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2019-11-01
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/2254
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832579246080393216
author Anastasija Rastovic
Maud Pélissier
Emmanuel Ferragne
author_facet Anastasija Rastovic
Maud Pélissier
Emmanuel Ferragne
author_sort Anastasija Rastovic
collection DOAJ
description Hearing swear words or taboo words causes us discomfort. Research suggests that emotional responses caused by such words are stronger when the words are spoken in the listener’s first language (L1), rather than their second language (L2). We attempt to replicate these findings with a perceptual experiment. French learners of English were asked to listen to English and French swear words while their electrodermal activity (EDA) was monitored. Emotionally-neutral words were also included as baseline. EDA records small fluctuations in skin conductance caused by variations in the activity of sweat glands. Such variations are known to be correlated to the emotional state of the listener and reflect levels of stress or arousal in particular. We found a Word type ✕ Language interaction, which shows strong emotional reactions to swear words limited to the listener’s first language. This supports the claims that the L1 and L2 may be embodied differently, with the L2 being processed only semantically but not affectively. The role of different factors on L2 emotionality is discussed.
format Article
id doaj-art-7fbebe7c13354a89b59639d076ef991e
institution Kabale University
issn 1278-3331
2427-0466
language English
publishDate 2019-11-01
publisher Presses Universitaires du Midi
record_format Article
series Anglophonia
spelling doaj-art-7fbebe7c13354a89b59639d076ef991e2025-01-30T12:32:48ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662019-11-012710.4000/anglophonia.2254The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activityAnastasija RastovicMaud PélissierEmmanuel FerragneHearing swear words or taboo words causes us discomfort. Research suggests that emotional responses caused by such words are stronger when the words are spoken in the listener’s first language (L1), rather than their second language (L2). We attempt to replicate these findings with a perceptual experiment. French learners of English were asked to listen to English and French swear words while their electrodermal activity (EDA) was monitored. Emotionally-neutral words were also included as baseline. EDA records small fluctuations in skin conductance caused by variations in the activity of sweat glands. Such variations are known to be correlated to the emotional state of the listener and reflect levels of stress or arousal in particular. We found a Word type ✕ Language interaction, which shows strong emotional reactions to swear words limited to the listener’s first language. This supports the claims that the L1 and L2 may be embodied differently, with the L2 being processed only semantically but not affectively. The role of different factors on L2 emotionality is discussed.https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/2254Second language acquisitionemotions(dis)embodied cognitionelectrodermal activitytaboo words
spellingShingle Anastasija Rastovic
Maud Pélissier
Emmanuel Ferragne
The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
Anglophonia
Second language acquisition
emotions
(dis)embodied cognition
electrodermal activity
taboo words
title The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
title_full The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
title_fullStr The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
title_full_unstemmed The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
title_short The perception of swear words by French learners of English: an experiment involving electrodermal activity
title_sort perception of swear words by french learners of english an experiment involving electrodermal activity
topic Second language acquisition
emotions
(dis)embodied cognition
electrodermal activity
taboo words
url https://journals.openedition.org/anglophonia/2254
work_keys_str_mv AT anastasijarastovic theperceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity
AT maudpelissier theperceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity
AT emmanuelferragne theperceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity
AT anastasijarastovic perceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity
AT maudpelissier perceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity
AT emmanuelferragne perceptionofswearwordsbyfrenchlearnersofenglishanexperimentinvolvingelectrodermalactivity