@article{oai:bunkyo.repo.nii.ac.jp:00000836, author = {鈴木, 賢男 and 大石, 昂 and 松野, 真 and 堀内, 正彦 and 鈴木, 国威 and 大平, 泰子 and 藤森, 進 and 岡田, 斉}, journal = {人間科学研究, Bulletin of Human Science}, month = {2011-03-01, 2011-03-08}, note = {This is the 3rd report in a series of studies on analysis of the Questionnaire on Affective Imagery (QAI). Developed by Takashi Uesugi (1981, 1982, 1983, 1989, 1998, 2000), the QAI is a list of paired words with a rating scale. The word on the left in each pair is an "object word" (32) like self, father, mother, family, or social. The word on the right is an "affective word" (8) like joy, hope, love, astonishment, sorrow, fear, anger, or disgust. The 1st Report noted that current college subjects displayed the same structure of Affective Imagery despite the substantial passage of time. The 2nd Report described a model in which the scales comprising Affective Imagery (positive/negative images) of Cause-Objects (ex. father, mother, and relatives) influenced the imagery of Result-Objects (ex. job, death, art, or journey). Those scales were found to be related to "neuroticism" or "agreeableness" in the NEO-FFI (Big5 Personality Inventory) The current study examined the stability of the structure of affective imagery with regard to 32 object words. Subjects were 60 male and 58 female college students. The results of the study were, first, that 8 emotional ratings of 16 words concerning a familiar object (ex. father, home, school, or health) were relatively stable compared to other words (ex. husband, office, or art). Second, the resulting affective value calculated from 8 affective ratings with respect to the 16 words did not vary regardless of indiscriminate or discriminate weighting of the object word.}, pages = {173--188}, title = {『感情イメージ調査』についての研究 (III) : 個別対象の感情イメージ構造の安定性と対象語・感情語の選定}, volume = {32}, year = {} }