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Exploring Users' Desired Emotion in Product Light Focusing on the Refrigerator
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정경아 Kyeong Ah Jeong , 석현정 Hyeon-jeong Suk |
KJSES 21(3) 3-16, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.3 |
ABSTRACT
Despite the substantial changes made in the product design field to adopt light as an essential design element, there has been little effort to define how customers respond emotionally to the light design of products. Therefore, it is necessary to analyze the emotional effect of light as a new design element. However, previous research focuses solely on deriving optimal lighting conditions to achieve particular emotional effects. Therefore, this paper investigates the customers' desired emotional effects of product's light design. We studied refrigerators that utilize light as the main design element of the product. We applied mixed methods by combining close-ended questions and open-ended question to efficiently derive the desired emotion. Participants were asked to choose the most favorable refrigerator image in each of the twelve image groups and indicate why they choose that image with the short-answer survey form. Approximately one thousand terms were collected, and those terms were classified into 29 groups using thesaurus relationships. The term groups were again classified into the four big emotion categories and labelled as “abstract quality,” “light property,” “space perception,” and “visual comfort.” Also, a model of the relationship between desired light style and light properties was proposed, since we observed the light properties related to three other categories. This study used mixed methods to identify the emotional value of a new design element. We suggest that the emotional categories derived and the proposed relationship model could be used to evaluate the product's light design.
keyword : 제품 디자인, 빛 디자인, 소구 감성, 냉장고 조명, 관계 모델 개발, Product Design, Light Design, Style, Refrigerator Lighting, Relationship Model Development
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The Pathway Linking Childhood Trauma and Stress Perception: Mediating Role of Theory of Mind
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장은영 Eun-young Jang |
KJSES 21(3) 17-28, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.17 |
ABSTRACT
This study investigated the differential effects of childhood trauma, especially neglect, emotional abuse, and physical abuse on stress perception in relation to the ToM (theory of mind), among one-hundred and fifty five college students. For this purpose, self-reported childhood neglect, emotional abuse, physical abuse, and stress levels during the previous week were measured. Social cognition was measured using a ToM questionnaire which asked respondents to guess the intentions of the person in each vignette by providing additional hints. In order to examine the predicting role of childhood trauma and mediating role of ToM, two distinct structural models assuming full (Model 1) and partial (Model 2) mediational effects were compared using structural equation modeling. The partial mediational model was supported and the main results were as follows. First, childhood neglect indirectly predicted stress perception through the effect of the ToM. Second, childhood emotional abuse directly predicted stress perception. Third, childhood physical abuse had no distinct effect on stress perception. Finally, the limitations of this study and the implications for future studies are discussed.
keyword : 아동기 학대, 아동기 방임, 아동기 외상, 마음이론, 스트레스 지각, Childhood Abuse, Childhood Neglect, Childhood Trauma, Theory of Mind & Stress Perception
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Interactivity of Neural Representations for Perceiving Shared Social Memory
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Jeesung Ahn , Hye-young Kim , Jonghyun Park , Sanghoon Han |
KJSES 21(3) 29-48, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.29 |
ABSTRACT
Although the concept of “common sense” is often taken for granted, judging whether behavior or knowledge is common sense requires a complex series of mental processes. Additionally, different perceptions of common sense can lead to social conflicts. Thus, it is important to understand how we perceive common sense and make relevant judgments. The present study investigated the dynamics of neural representations underlying judgments of what common sense is. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, participants indicated the extent to which they thought that a given sentence corresponded to common sense under the given perspective. We incorporated two different decision contexts involving different cultural perspectives to account for social variability of the judgments, an important feature of common sense judgments apart from logical true/false judgments. Our findings demonstrated that common sense versus non-common sense perceptions involve the amygdala and a brain network for episodic memory recollection, including the hippocampus, angular gyrus, posterior cingulate cortex, and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, suggesting integrated affective, mnemonic, and social functioning in common sense processing. Furthermore, functional connectivity multivariate pattern analysis revealed that interactivity among the amygdala, angular gyrus, and parahippocampal cortex reflected representational features of common sense perception and not those of non-common sense perception. Our study demonstrated that the social memory network is exclusively involved in processing common sense and not non-common sense. These results suggest that intergroup exclusion and misunderstanding can be reduced by experiencing and encoding long-term social memories about behavioral norms and knowledge that act as common sense of the outgroup.
keyword : Common Sense, Neuroimaging, fcMVPA, Amygdala, MTL
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Brain Function During Recall of Anger Experience According to the Level of Trait Anger
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음영지 Young-ji Eum , 이경화 Kyung Hwa Lee , 손진훈 Jin-hun Sohn |
KJSES 21(3) 49-60, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.49 |
ABSTRACT
Trait anger is one of the psychological traits associated with experiences of anger. Individuals with high trait anger become angry easily at trivial events, and experience anger more frequently, intensely, and over a longer duration. This study aimed to investigate neural responses during experiences of anger, and identify the neural correlates of trait anger. Thirty five adults participated in the functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) experiment. They were scanned while they recalled an anger-inducing memory that was supposed to evoke an experience of anger. During the angry recall compared to the emotionally neutral recall, our participants showed greater neural activation in the right superior temporal gyrus (BA38), left inferior frontal gyrus (BA45), right thalamus, right insula (BA13), bilateral cuneus (BA17), and right cerebellum anterior lobe. The correlation analysis revealed that trait anger scores were positively associated with right insula activity during the angry recall. Individuals with higher trait anger were more likely to show greater activity in the right insula in response to past experiences of anger, as previously implicated in various studies of emotional processing. This finding suggests that trait anger may be an important factor in modulating anger-related brain activity.
keyword : 특성 분노, 분노 뇌기제, 기능적 자기 공명 영상, 분노 기억 회상, Trait Anger, Neural Substrates of Anger, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Angry Memory Recall
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Lie Detection Using the Difference Between Episodic and Semantic Memory
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엄진섭 Jin-sup Eom , 전하정 Hajung Jeon , 손진훈 Jin-hun Sohn |
KJSES 21(3) 61-72, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.61 |
ABSTRACT
Items related to a crime that are known only to criminals and investigators can be used in the concealed information test (CIT) to assess whether the suspect is guilty of the offense. However, in many cases wherein the suspect is exposed to information about the crime, the CIT cannot be used. Although the perpetrator's memories about the details of the crime are episodic, the memories of a suspect who has inadvertently discovered the details of the crime are more likely to be semantic. The retrieval of episodic memories is associated with theta wave activity, whereas that of semantic memories is associated with alpha wave activity. Therefore, these aspects of memory retrieval can be useful in identifying the perpetrator of the crime. In this study, P300-based CITs were conducted in a guilty participant in a mock crime and an innocent participant who has been given information about the simulated offense. The results demonstrate that the difference in P300 amplitudes between the probe and the irrelevant stimulus did not differ between the guilty and innocent conditions. As expected, the lower theta band power (4-6 Hz) was higher in the probe than in the irrelevant stimulus in the guilty condition, but there was no difference in the innocent condition. Conversely, the upper alpha band power (8-10 Hz) was lower in the probe than in the irrelevant stimulus in the innocent condition, but there was no difference in the guilty condition. The possibility of using theta and alpha band powers in lie detection is discussed.
keyword : 일화기억, 의미기억, 거짓말 탐지, P300, 숨긴정보검사, Episodic Memory, Semantic Memory, Lie Detection, Concealed Information Test
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Emotion Recognition Method of Competition-Cooperation Using Electrocardiogram
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박상인 Sangin Park , 이동원 Don Won Lee , 문성철 Sungchul Mun , 황민철 Mincheol Whang |
KJSES 21(3) 73-82, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.73 |
ABSTRACT
Attempts have been made to recognize social emotion, including competition-cooperation, while designing interaction in work places. This study aimed to determine the cardiac response associated with classifying competition-cooperation of social emotion. Sixty students from Sangmyung University participated in the study and were asked to play a pattern game to experience the social emotion associated with competition and cooperation. Electrocardiograms were measured during the task and were analyzed to obtain time domain indicators, such as RRI, SDNN, and pNN50, and frequency domain indicators, such as VLF, LF, HF, VLF/HF, LF/HF, lnVLF, lnLF, lnHF, and lnVLF/lnHF. The significance of classifying social emotions was assessed using an independent t-test. The rule-base for the classification was determined using significant parameters of 30 participants and verified from data obtained from another 30 participants. As a result, 91.67% participants were correctly classified. This study proposes a new method of classifying social emotions of competition and cooperation and provides objective data for designing social interaction.
keyword : 감성 인식, 사회 감성, 심전도, 경쟁, 협력, Emotion Recognition, Social Emotion, Electrocardiogram, Competition, Cooperation
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Differences in Large-scale and Sliding-window-based Functional Networks of Reappraisal and Suppression
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Suhnyoung Jun , Seung-koo Lee , Sanghoon Han |
KJSES 21(3) 83-102, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.83 |
ABSTRACT
The process model of emotion regulation suggests that cognitive reappraisal and expressive suppression engage at different time points in the regulation process. Although multiple brain regions and networks have been identified for each strategy, no articles have explored changes in network characteristics or network connectivity over time. The present study examined (a) the whole-brain network and six other resting-state networks, (b) their modularity and global efficiency, which is an index of the efficiency of information exchange across the network, (c) the degree and betweenness centrality for 160 brain regions to identify the hub nodes with the most control over the entire network, and (d) the intra-network and inter-network functional connectivity (FC). Such investigations were performed using a traditional large-scale FC analysis and a relatively recent sliding window correlation analysis. The results showed that the right inferior orbitofrontal cortex was the hub region of the whole-brain network for both strategies. The present findings of temporally altering functional activity of the networks revealed that the default mode network (DMN) activated at the early stage of reappraisal, followed by the task-positive networks (cingulo-opercular network and fronto-parietal network), emotion-processing networks (the cerebellar network and DMN), and sensorimotor network (SMN) that activated at the early stage of suppression, followed by the greater recruitment of task-positive networks and their functional connection with the emotional response-related networks (SMN and occipital network). This is the first study that provides neuroimaging evidence supporting the process model of emotion regulation by revealing the temporally varying network efficiency and intra- and inter-network functional connections of reappraisal and suppression.
keyword : Emotion Regulation, Reappraisal, Suppression, Dynamic Functional Connectivity, Graph Theory
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Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE): Factor Structure and Measurement Invariance Across Gender in Korea
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구재선 Jaisun Koo |
KJSES 21(3) 103-114, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.103 |
ABSTRACT
The Scale of Positive and Negative Experience (SPANE) is a newly developed emotional scale to measure well-being that was designed to overcome the limitations of the previous emotional scales (Diener et al., 2010). It comprises 12 items that measure positive and negative emotional experiences, including general (e.g., positive, negative) and specific (e.g., joyful, sad) items. It also reflects all levels of arousal. This study examined the factor structure and gender invariance of the Korean version of the SPANE. For this purpose, responses to the scale of a sample of 551 Korean college students (276 males and 275 females) were analyzed. The results exhibited high internal consistency reliability and construct validity for a Korean population. Furthermore, the configural, metric, and scalar invariance of the SPANE held across gender. These results suggest that the Korean version of the SPANE is a valid scale for measuring the emotional experiences of Korean students, and it is appropriate to use in future studies of gender difference in emotional well-being.
keyword : 측정 동일성, 부정 정서, 긍정 정서, 척도 타당화, 주관적 안녕감, Measurement Invariance, Negative Emotion, Positive Emotion, Scale Validation, Subjective Well-being
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A Study on the Color Sensation and Symbolism of Tibet Costume
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왕종 Cong Wang , 김지수 Jisu Kim , 나영주 Youngjoo Na |
KJSES 21(3) 115-128, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.115 |
ABSTRACT
Tibetans who live in the Tibetan highlands, the Roof of the World, have their own unique lifestyle wherein they conform to its long history, natural environment, and their own form of clothing culture. In their costumes, the use of colors, patterns and designs express religious meaning and represent the hopes and heart of life, which respects nature. This study aims to analyze the colors used in Tibetan costumes and examine the meaning of these colors. In addition, this study intends to understand the specificity of Tibetan culture through a consideration of the symbolism of the colors of ethnic costumes. By examining the literature and conducting case studies, colors of Tibetan costumes were analyzed through the I.R.I HUE-TONE system. We analyzed 96 photographs of the costumes photographed during the Tibet ceremony costume, photographs seen at the Qinghai Tibet Culture Museum and photographs from the Internet museum. The results revealed the following: First, the most important element of the costumes is connected to the five colors of JangOsaek, which gives meaning to each color. Red, navy blue, yellow, white and green symbolize fire, the sky, earth, clouds or snow, and grasslands, respectively. Second, Tibetan costumes are characterized by bold color contrasts such as red and green, black and white, red and yellow, and yellow and purple to achieve an intense harmony of colors. Third, these fancy costumes express the unique aesthetics of the Tibetan people. The primary colors follow general emotions, but they can also include their own emotion.
keyword : 장오색, 전통 복식, I.R.I HUE-TONE 시스템, 색채 의미, JangOsaek, Traditional Costume, I.R.I HUE-TONE System, Colors Meaning
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A Research on Design Direction for the Smart Walking Wear to Support Walking Exercise for the Baby Boomer Group
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반현성 Hyunsung Ban , 황수정 Sujung Hwang , 김신혜 Sinhye Kim , 이주현 Joohyeon Lee |
KJSES 21(3) 129-140, 2018 DOI : 10.14695/KJSOS.2018.21.3.129 |
ABSTRACT
This study aimed to analyze consumers' acceptance of sports applications and smart sportswear to better design technology-enhanced walking exercise wear for the Baby Boomer generation based on their cohort characteristics. A questionnaire with items related to acceptance of existing smart sportswear design, functionality, and usability as well as existing sports application design, functionality, and usability was sent to consumers aged 50-65. Of 163 questionnaires distributed, 150 were used for analysis. The results showed that middle-aged consumers were aware of smart sportswear's functional stability, but were concerned about care, durability, and convenience. Middle-aged consumers were also aware of sports applications as educational functions for obtaining new information. Additionally, they found sports applications to have lower perceived convenience and accessibility relative to the young generation, highlighting the need for simple instructions and explanations for sports application planning. Based on these results, we propose “Everyday design for general sportswear,” “Functions based on consumer's preference,” “Enhanced design for durability and management convenience” for designing and planning walking exercise wear for middle-aged consumers, and “Convenient application organization” and “Educational exercise contents” for application planning for walking exercises.
keyword : 베이비부머 집단, 스마트 워킹웨어, 스마트 스포츠웨어 측면 수용태도, 스포츠 애플리케이션 측면 수용태도, Baby Boomer Group, Smart Walking Wear, Acceptance Attitude on Smart Sports Wear, Acceptance Attitude on Sports Application
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