24 July,2022 07:01 PM IST | Washington | ANI
Image for representational purpose only. Photo: istock
Every single one of us land up in situations where we are insulted, and more often than not, it affects us really badly. According to a new study, listening to that very insult feel like a 'little smack in the face' regardless of the kind of circumstance during which it has been said. A group of researchers using electroencephalography (EEG) and skin conductance recordings, discovered that the short-term effects of repeated verbal insults were compared to those of repeated positive or neutral evaluations, according to a new study.
The findings of the study were published in the journal Frontiers in Communication.
The findings provide us with a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to examine the relationship between emotion and language.
Humans are a highly social species. We rely on everchanging cooperation dynamics and interpersonal relations to survive and thrive. Words have a big role to play in these relations, as they are tools used to understand interpersonal behaviour. As such, words can hurt, but we know little about how the impact of words comes about as someone processes an insult.
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"The exact way in which words can deliver their offensive, emotionally negative payload at the moment these words are being read or heard is not yet well-understood," said corresponding author Dr Marijn Struiksma, of Utrecht University.
Because insults pose a threat to our reputation and against our 'self', they provide a unique opportunity to research the interface between language and emotion. Struiksma continued: "Understanding what an insulting expression does to people as it unfolds, and why, is of considerable importance to psycholinguists interested in how language moves people, but also to others who wish to understand the details of social behaviour."
EEG and skin conductance
Struiksma and her colleagues wanted to examine whether processing verbal insults is less sensitive to repetition than compliments and if so, which cognitive stages are implicated in the adaptation, and which aren't.
"We assume that verbal insults trigger a cascade of rapidly consecutive or overlapping processing effects and that different parts of that cascade might be differently affected by repetition, with some of them rapidly wearing off, and others remaining strongly responsive for a long time," explained Struiksma.
EEG and skin conductance electrodes were applied to 79 female participants. They then read a series of repeated statements that realised three different speech acts: insults (for example, "Linda is horrible"), compliments (for example, "Linda is impressive"), and neutral, factually correct descriptive statements (for example, "Linda is Dutch").
To examine whether the impact of the words depended on who the statement was about, half of the three sets of statements used the participant's own name, and the other half used somebody else's. The experiment involved no real interaction between the participants and another human. The participants were told that the statements were being said by three different men.
Mini slaps to the face
The researchers found that even under unnatural conditions -- a lab setting, no real human interactions, and statements coming from fictitious people -- verbal insults can still "get at you", no matter who the insult is about, and continue to do so even after repetition.
Specifically, the EEG showed an early insult effect in P2 amplitude that was very robust over repetition and did not depend on who the insult was about. P2 is a waveform component of the event-related potential (ERP) measured at the human scalp.
In the setting of the experiment, the insults were perceived as mini slaps to the face, explained Struiksma, "Our study shows that in a psycholinguistic laboratory experiment without real interaction between speakers, insults deliver lexical 'mini slaps in the face', such that the strongly negative evaluative words involved that a participant reads, automatically grab attention during lexical retrieval, regardless of how often that retrieval occurs."
Yet the study only shows the effects of insults in an artificial setting. The participants will have recognised the insults as such, but as decontextualized statements, the actual emotional effects of insults lose power. Studying insults in a real setting remains ethically challenging.
Even so, the results show an increased sensitivity of our brains to negative words compared to positive words. An insult immediately captures our brain's attention, as the emotional meaning of insults is retrieved from long-term memory. The compliments elicited a less strong P2 effect, showing a negativity bias in the amount of attention that is automatically allocated to negative versus positive interpersonal situations.
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