Friday, January 27, 2017

The "untranslatable" emotions you never knew you had

From gigil to shinrin-yoku and tarab, there are many foreign emotion words with no English equivalent. Learning to identify and cultivate these experiences could give you a richer and more successful life.
Have you ever felt a little mbuki-mvuki – the irresistible urge to “shuck off your clothes as you dance”? Perhaps a little kilig – the jittery fluttering feeling as you talk to someone you fancy? How about uitwaaien – which encapsulates the revitalising effects of taking a walk in the wind?
These words – taken from Bantu, Tagalog, and Dutch – have no direct English equivalent, but they represent very precise emotional experiences that are neglected in our language. And if Tim Lomas at the University of East London has his way, they might soon become much more familiar.
Lomas’s Positive Lexicography Project aims to capture the many flavours of good feelings (some of which are distinctly bittersweet) found across the world, in the hope that we might start to incorporate them all into our daily lives. We have already borrowed many emotion words from other languages, after all – think “frisson”, from French, or “schadenfreude”, from German – but there are many more that have not yet wormed their way into our vocabulary. Lomas has found hundreds of these "untranslatable" experiences so far – and he’s only just begun.
Learning these words, he hopes, will offer us all a richer and more nuanced understanding of ourselves. “They offer a very different way of seeing the world.”
(Credit: Alamy)
Gigil is a Tagalog word that describes the irresistible urge to pinch or squeeze someone because they are loved or cherished (Credit: Alamy)
Lomas says he was first inspired after hearing a talk on the Finnish concept of sisu, which is a sort of “extraordinary determination in the face of adversity”. According to Finnish speakers, the English ideas of “grit”, “perseverance” or “resilience” do not come close to describing the inner strength encapsulated in their native term. It was "untranslatable" in the sense that there was no direct or easy equivalent encoded within the English vocabulary that could capture that deep resonance.
Intrigued, he began to hunt for further examples, scouring the academic literature and asking every foreign acquaintance for their own suggestions. The first results of this project were published in the Journal of Positive Psychology last year. 
Many of the terms referred to highly specific positive feelings, which often depend on very particular circumstances:
  • Desbundar (Portuguese) – to shed one’s inhibitions in having fun
  • Tarab (Arabic) – a musically induced state of ecstasy or enchantment
  • Shinrin-yoku (Japanese) – the relaxation gained from bathing in the forest, figuratively or literally
  • Gigil (Tagalog) – the irresistible urge to pinch or squeeze someone because they are loved or cherished
  • Yuan bei (Chinese) – a sense of complete and perfect accomplishment
  • Iktsuarpok (Inuit) – the anticipation one feels when waiting for someone, whereby one keeps going outside to check if they have arrived
But others represented more complex and bittersweet experiences, which could be crucial to our growth and overall flourishing.  
  • Natsukashii (Japanese) – a nostalgic longing for the past, with happiness for the fond memory, yet sadness that it is no longer
  • Wabi-sabi (Japanese) – a “dark, desolate sublimity” centred on transience and imperfection in beauty
  • Saudade (Portuguese) – a melancholic longing or nostalgia for a person, place or thing that is far away either spatially or in time – a vague, dreaming wistfulness for phenomena that may not even exist
  • Sehnsucht (German) – literally “life-longings”, an intense desire for alternative states and realisations of life, even if they are unattainable
In addition to these emotions, Lomas’s lexicography also charted the personal characteristics and behaviours that might determine our long-term well-being and the ways we interact with other people.
  • Dadirri (Australian aboriginal) term – a deep, spiritual act of reflective and respectful listening
  • Pihentagyú (Hungarian) – literally meaning “with a relaxed brain”, it describes quick-witted people who can come up with sophisticated jokes or solutions
  • Desenrascanço (Portuguese) – to artfully disentangle oneself from a troublesome situation
  • Sukha (Sanskrit) – genuine lasting happiness independent of circumstances
  • Orenda (Huron) – the power of the human will to change the world in the face of powerful forces such as fate
You can view many more examples on his website, where there is also the opportunity to submit your own. Lomas readily admits that many of the descriptions he has offered so far are only an approximation of the term's true meaning. "The whole project is a work in progress, and I’m continually aiming to refine the definitions of the words in the list," he says. "I definitely welcome people’s feedback and suggestions in that regard."
(Credit: Getty Images)
Portuguese fado singers like Cristina Branco channel the intense longing of "saudade" (Credit: Getty Images)
In the future, Lomas hopes that other psychologists may begin to explore the causes and consequences of these experiences – to extend our understanding of emotion beyond the English concepts that have dominated research so far.
But studying these terms will not just be of scientific interest; Lomas suspects that familiarising ourselves with the words might actually change the way we feel ourselves, by drawing our attention to fleeting sensations we had long ignored.
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“In our stream of consciousness – that wash of different sensations feelings and emotions – there’s so much to process that a lot passes us by,” Lomas says. “The feelings we have learned to recognise and label are the ones we notice – but there’s a lot more that we may not be aware of. And so I think if we are given these new words, they can help us articulate whole areas of experience we’ve only dimly noticed.”
As evidence, Lomas points to the work of Lisa Feldman Barrett at Northeastern University, who has shown that our abilities to identify and label our emotions can have far-reaching effects.
Her research was inspired by the observation that certain people use different emotion words interchangeably, while others are highly precise in their descriptions. “Some people use words like anxious, afraid, angry, disgusted to refer to a general affective state of feeling bad,” she explains. “For them, they are synonyms, whereas for other people they are distinctive feelings with distinctive actions associated with them.”
This is called “emotion granularity” and she usually measures this by asking the participants to rate their feelings on each day over the period of a few weeks, before she calculates the variation and nuances within their reports: whether the same old terms always coincide, for instance.
(Credit: Getty Images)
Wabi-sabi is a Japanese term that describes our appreciation of transient and imperfect beauty - such as the fleeting splendour of cherry blossom (Credit: Getty Images)
Importantly, she has found that this then determines how well we cope with life. If you are better able to pin down whether you are feeling despair or anxiety, for instance, you might be better able to decide how to remedy those feelings: whether to talk to a friend, or watch a funny film. Or being able to identify your hopein the face of disappointment might help you to look for new solutions to your problem.
In this way, emotion vocabulary is a bit like a directory, allowing you to call up a greater number of strategies to cope with life. Sure enough, people who score highly on emotion granularity are better able to recover more quickly from stress and are less likely to drink alcohol as a way of recovering from bad news. It can even improve your academic success. Marc Brackett at Yale University has found that teaching 10 and 11-year-old children a richer emotional vocabulary improved their end-of-year grades, and promoted better behaviour in the classroom. “The more granular our experience of emotion is, the more capable we are to make sense of our inner lives,” he says.
Both Brackett and  Barrett agree that Lomas’s “positive lexicography” could be a good prompt to start identifying the subtler contours of our emotional landscape. “I think it is useful – you can think of the words and the concepts they are associated with as tools for living,” says  Barrett. They might even inspire us to try new experiences, or appreciate old ones in a new light.
It’s a direction of research that Lomas would like to explore in the future. In the meantime, Lomas is still continuing to build his lexicography – which has grown to nearly a thousand terms. Of all the words he has found so far, Lomas says that he most often finds himself pondering Japanese concepts such as wabi-sabi (that “dark, desolate sublimity” involving transience and imperfection). “It speaks to this idea of finding beauty in phenomena that are aged and imperfect,” he says. “If we saw the world through those eyes, it could be a different way of engaging in life.”
-- 
David Robson is BBC Future’s feature writer. He is @d_a_robson on Twitter.
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The lure of New Zealand for jaded Americans

A photo taken on 25 February 2015, shows New Zealand's highest mountain Mount Cook- also known by its Maori name of Aoraki - which sits in the Southern Alps on the South Island at a height of 3,724 metres (12,218 ft).Image copyrightAFP
Image captionMany are drawn to New Zealand's natural attractions such as Mount Cook
Chance the Rapper says he wants to move there and tech billionaire Peter Thiel has become a citizen. Wellington-based journalist Ben Collins asks whether New Zealand is becoming a "utopia" for Americans looking to leave. 
Forget bunkers in the forest full of food tins and bottled water - it seems New Zealand, with a population of 4.4 million, has become the best option for a new breed of American survivalist. 
When the New Zealand Herald revealed this week that Silicon Valley tech billionaire Peter Thiel had become a citizen and purchased a lake-front estate it perhaps shouldn't have been a surprise. 
Mr Thiel, who previously said New Zealand was a "utopia" and has invested heavily there, is just one of several US migrants who have realised what the country has to offer. 

Punching above its weight 

New Zealand recently overtook Singapore as the best place to do business, according to the World Bank. Transparency International ranks it as the world's least corrupt country, and the 2016 Global Peace Index said it was the fourth safest behind Iceland, Denmark and Austria. 
"We've definitely had an increase in American inquiries, and at least one sale that has been a direct run-off from the presidential result in the United States," says Nick Horton, an agent specialising in luxury real estate. 
"There's just a feeling that people want to create a bolthole in the southern hemisphere that's away from some of the problems facing the Western world," he says. 
Recently, the New Yorker magazine ran a piece titled Doomsday Prep for the Super-rich. It detailed the rise in wealthy investors who see New Zealand as their escape from a volatile world. 
It is safe and clean. The west coast of the United States is a 13-hour flight away, and modern technology has tamed the tyranny of distance.
The temperate, mountainous country is also comparably well-placed to deal with rising sea levels, and its most recent major attack was in 1985, when French spies blew up a Greenpeace vessel in Auckland harbour. 
However, as Horton explains, the interest from the United States is not new.
"The same happened after the global financial crisis, and the same thing happened after Obama was elected, when some people thought the United States wouldn't tolerate having a black leader." 

US surge

According to Immigration New Zealand, in November 2016 when the US presidential election was held, 17,584 people registered their interest to study, work or invest in the country, compared with 1,272 in November 2015.
In the two days following the election, the agency said its website received 88,353 visits from the United States - compared to a usual daily average of 2,300 visits a day. 
Registrations have remained higher than average, with 3,159 received this month, compared to 1,724 in January 2016.
However, registrations are far higher than actual visa applications.
Chance The Rapper performs on Camp Stage during day one of Tyler, the Creator's 5th Annual Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival at Exposition Park on 12 November 2016 in Los Angeles, California.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionAmerican performer Chance The Rapper has expressed interest in moving to New Zealand

Thursday, January 26, 2017

Hideo Kojima says games and films will merge together

16 hours ago

Video caption Touring Tokyo with Metal Gear creator Hideo Kojima
Legendary game designer Hideo Kojima says games, novels and films will "merge into one type of entertainment". 
Described as the Spielberg of gaming, he was speaking to Radio 1 Newsbeat during an exclusive tour of his new studio in Tokyo.
"We want to be there when that time comes, to help show people a new kind of experience.
"We're already preparing for that future, but first we're focusing on our next game." 
The man behind the iconic Metal Gear series is looking to the future after a couple years dominated by a controversial break-up from his former employers Konami. 
He doesn't go into detail but tells Newsbeat: "I worked for 30 years at my previous company.
"I had a lot of experiences there and I'm very appreciative of everything I gained from that experience."
He set up his new studio, Kojima Productions, after leaving Konami in December 2015.
The science fiction inspired hallway into the Kojima Productions Studio
Image caption The entrance to the new Kojima Productions studio in Tokyo
"I have more freedom now because the final decision comes down to me.
"This company is not listed on the stock exchange so we don't need to worry about pleasing investors.
"We can just concentrate on making good games."
But games are just the beginning for the man credited for creating the stealth genre back in 1987.
Hideo Kojima with one of the stars of his next title Death Stranding, Mads Mikkelsen
Image caption Hideo Kojima with Mads Mikkelsen, one of the stars of his next title Death Stranding
That title, Metal Gear, went on to inspire top selling gaming franchises like Assassin's Creed, Uncharted and Hitman.
"In life people are very busy doing lots of things," he explains through a translator.
"The time you have to choose what media or entertainment you experience is dwindling.
"More and more people are looking at types of media that combine elements together."
[Death Stranding] is not like anything they've played before.
Hideo Kojima
"If we just make a game people are less likely to choose that as something to do.
"They would rather engage in something that combines different forms of entertainment together.
"That's where we need to focus our efforts, on this convergence."
He's planning on a future where movies are playable and games give players the choice to access more extended movie like content within them.
Quantum Break poster
Image caption Quantum Break is one game that has experimented with merging gaming and movie content together
But before we see this vision realised, he's focusing on making Sony's exclusive release Death Stranding. 
Not much is known about the top-secret title that was dramatically announced last year.
Despite our best efforts we couldn't get much more information out of its creator.
"No comment," he laughs when we ask for details of the game.
Inside the Kojima Productions Studio
Image caption The company's current project, top-secret PlayStation exclusive game, Death Stranding dominates the new office
He explains: "Unfortunately we can't really say anything about it at the moment."
However it is likely that fans can expect something very different to what he's produced before.
"We want this game to be something that people can get into easily but after an hour or two they'll start to notice something a little different.
"It's not like anything they've played before."
During a visit to the Sony exhibition centre in Tokyo he explains more: "Bands that everyone remembers take risks.
"They constantly change their music from previous albums, adapting and evolving through the ages."
The character Quiet from his last game
Image caption The character Quiet from his last game caused controversy for her outfit, Kojima defended the way some women are represented in his games
"They might lose some fans along the way, but they bring in new ones, that's the kind of approach I want to take with my new game."
Kojima also talked about some of the other big issues in gaming.
He defended the way women have been represented in previous titles, with some gamers critical of "overly sexualised" characters.
"I'm going to have a different approach for the next game," he says.
Kojima Productions reception
Image caption Kojima has many of his lifetime achievement awards on display at the reception of his new office
"What I really want to avoid is, like you see in some games, characters with big breasts with no back story.
"If I make characters that at first glance might look like this then they'll have a deep background story to give a specific reason why."
Virtual reality is being hailed as the future of gaming but Kojima hints that VR games need to get better.
My favourite thing to do is make things. Even on my death bed I will still be making something
Hideo Kojima
"This might upset some people," he says.
"I don't think many titles are taking advantage of the potential of VR
"It has the potential to bring [out] emotions that people haven't experienced before, when playing a game or watching a movie." 
Hideo Kojima's office
Image caption Books, films and Lego provide inspiration in Hideo Kojima's office
Gaming's top-selling titles are often sequels in big franchises like Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed.
Despite having a history closely tied to one of those big franchises himself, Kojima tells us not to expect his new studio to take that approach.
"We don't want to be a studio that re-uses assets, ideas or just makes sequels all the time. 
"We want it so [that] every time someone plays one of our games they're getting a new experience." 
The 53-year-old has no plans to retire any time soon. In fact, he says he's only just getting started.
"My favourite thing to do is make things. Even on my death bed I will still be making something, because that's what life is for me."
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