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The sudden devotion emotion: kama muta and the cultural practices whose functio...

Fiske, A. P.; Seibt, B.; Schubert, T.

When communal sharing relationships (CSRs) suddenly intensify, people experience an emotion that English speakers may label, depending on context, “moved,” “touched,” “heart-warming,” “nostalgia,” “patriotism,” or “rapture” (although sometimes people use each of these terms for other emotions). We call the emotion kama muta (Sanskrit, “moved by love”). Kama muta evokes adaptive motives to devote and commit to t...

Date: 2019   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Kama muta: conceptualizing and measuring the experience of being moved across 1...

Zickfeld, J. H.; Schubert, T. W.; Seibt, C.; Blomster, J.; Arriaga, P.; Basabe, N.; Blaut, A.; Caballero, A.; Carrera, P.; Dalgar, I.; Ding, Y.

English-speakers sometimes say that they feel moved to tears, emotionally touched, stirred, or that something warmed their heart; other languages use similar passive contact metaphors to refer to an affective state. We propose and measure the concept of kama muta to understand experiences often given these and other labels. Do the same experiences evoke the same kama muta emotion across nations and languages? W...

Date: 2019   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Too cute for words: cuteness evokes the heartwarming emotion of kama muta

Steinnes, K. K.; Blomster, J. K.; Seibt, B.; Zickfeld, J. H.; Fiske, A. P.

A configuration of infantile attributes including a large head, large eyes, with a small nose and mouth low on the head comprise the visual baby schema or Kindchenschema that English speakers call “cute.” In contrast to the stimulus gestalt that evokes it, the evoked emotional response to cuteness has been little studied, perhaps because the emotion has no specific name in English, Norwegian, or German. We hypo...

Date: 2019   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Touching the base: heart-warming ads from the 2016 U.S. election moved viewers ...

Seibt, B.; Schubert, T. W.; Zickfeld, J. H.; Fiske, A. P.

Some political ads used in the 2016 U.S. election evoked feelings colloquially known as being moved to tears. We conceptualise this phenomenon as a positive social emotion that appraises and motivates communal relations, is accompanied by physical sensations (including lachrymation, piloerection, chest warmth), and often labelled metaphorically. We surveyed U.S. voters in the fortnight before the 2016 U.S. elec...

Date: 2019   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Moment-to-moment changes in feeling moved match changes in closeness, tears, go...

Schubert, T. W.; Zickfeld, J. H.; Seibt, C.; Fiske, A. P.

Feeling moved or touched can be accompanied by tears, goosebumps, and sensations of warmth in the centre of the chest. The experience has been described frequently, but psychological science knows little about it. We propose that labelling one’s feeling as being moved or touched is a component of a social-relational emotion that we term kama muta (its Sanskrit label). We hypothesise that it is caused by apprais...

Date: 2018   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

“Kama muta” or ‘being moved by love’: a bootstrapping approach to the ontology ...

Fiske, A. P.; Schubert, T.; Seibt, B.

The emotion that people may label being moved, touched, having a heart-warming experience, rapture, or tender feelings evoked by cuteness has rarely been studied and is incompletely conceptualized. Yet it is pervasive across history, cultures, and contexts, shaping the most fundamental relationships that make up society. It is positive and can be a peak or ecstatic experience. Because no vernacular words consis...

Date: 2017   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Interpersonal closeness and morality predict feelings of being moved

Seibt, C.; Schubert, T. W.; Zickfeld, J. H.; Fiske, A. P.

The emotion commonly labeled in English as being moved or touched is widely experienced but only tacitly defined, and has received little systematic attention. Based on a review of conceptualizations from various disciplines, we hypothesize that events appraised as an increase in interpersonal closeness, or as moral acts, when sufficiently intense, elicit a positive emotion typically labeled "being moved," and ...

Date: 2017   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE

Empathic concern is part of a more general communal emotion

Zickfeld, J. H.; Schubert, T. W.; Seibt, C.; Fiske, A. P.

Seeing someone in need may evoke a particular kind of closeness that has been conceptualized as sympathy or empathic concern (which is distinct from other empathy constructs). In other contexts, when people suddenly feel close to others, or observe others suddenly feeling closer to each other, this sudden closeness tends to evoke an emotion often labeled in vernacular English as being moved, touched, or heart-w...

Date: 2017   |   Origin: Repositório ISCTE


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