ABSTRACT
Verifying that conceptualisations of emotions are consistent across languages and cultures is a critical precondition for meaningful cross-cultural research on emotional experience. For achievement-related emotions tied to successes or failures, such evidence is virtually non-existent. To address this gap, we compared Canadian, German, Colombian, and Chinese university students’ (NTotal = 126) perceptions of affective, cognitive, motivational, physiological, and expressive characteristics of 16 achievement-related emotions using a psycholinguistic tool for profiling emotion concepts (Achievement Emotions CoreGRID). Cross-cultural similarity of emotion concepts quantified through double-entry intraclass correlations was generally high, and highest for their affective, cognitive, and motivational components. However, results also point to cultural variation, particularly for physiological and expressive components. Variation in perceived physiological characteristics was most pronounced for boredom, and for comparisons of Canada, Germany, and Colombia with China. Implications for theoretical propositions of universality of emotion concepts and future research on achievement-related emotions are discussed.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 Parts of the data reported in this study have been analysed in previous research. Gentsch et al. (Citation2018) used feature ratings for joy, pride, contentment, anxiety, anger, shame, guilt, disappointment, sadness, despair, surprise to examine effects of contextualisation on German speakers’ emotion concepts. Their analyses focused on a subset of 65 features and 11 emotions common to the AECG and original GRID. Chavarría et al. (Citation2017) examined differences in Colombian individuals’ concepts of motivational components of achievement-related versus decontextualised emotions. This study used the complete GE/CO-datasets in conjunction with two new datasets and presents novel data addressing a new research question.