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Autori principali: Wu, Sophie, Wahle, Jan Philip, Mohammad, Saif M.
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2025
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.16189
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author Wu, Sophie
Wahle, Jan Philip
Mohammad, Saif M.
author_facet Wu, Sophie
Wahle, Jan Philip
Mohammad, Saif M.
contents This paper is the first investigation of the connection between emotion, embodiment, and everyday language in a large sample of natural language data. We created corpora of body part mentions (BPMs) in online English text (blog posts and tweets). This includes a subset featuring human annotations for the emotions of the person whose body part is mentioned in the text. We show that BPMs are common in personal narratives and tweets (~5% to 10% of posts include BPMs) and that their usage patterns vary markedly by time and %geographic location. Using word-emotion association lexicons and our annotated data, we show that text containing BPMs tends to be more emotionally charged, even when the BPM is not explicitly used to describe a physical reaction to the emotion in the text. Finally, we discover a strong and statistically significant correlation between body-related language and a variety of poorer health outcomes. In sum, we argue that investigating the role of body-part related words in language can open up valuable avenues of future research at the intersection of NLP, the affective sciences, and the study of human wellbeing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_16189
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The Language of Interoception: Examining Embodiment and Emotion Through a Corpus of Body Part Mentions
Wu, Sophie
Wahle, Jan Philip
Mohammad, Saif M.
Computation and Language
This paper is the first investigation of the connection between emotion, embodiment, and everyday language in a large sample of natural language data. We created corpora of body part mentions (BPMs) in online English text (blog posts and tweets). This includes a subset featuring human annotations for the emotions of the person whose body part is mentioned in the text. We show that BPMs are common in personal narratives and tweets (~5% to 10% of posts include BPMs) and that their usage patterns vary markedly by time and %geographic location. Using word-emotion association lexicons and our annotated data, we show that text containing BPMs tends to be more emotionally charged, even when the BPM is not explicitly used to describe a physical reaction to the emotion in the text. Finally, we discover a strong and statistically significant correlation between body-related language and a variety of poorer health outcomes. In sum, we argue that investigating the role of body-part related words in language can open up valuable avenues of future research at the intersection of NLP, the affective sciences, and the study of human wellbeing.
title The Language of Interoception: Examining Embodiment and Emotion Through a Corpus of Body Part Mentions
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.16189