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Scene-anchored Analysis of Affective “Stickiness” in Nordic Political-Thriller Television with Large Language Models (103175)

Session Information: Literature and Film Studies
Session Chair: Hsiang-chun Chu

Tuesday, 12 May 2026 11:25
Session: Session 2
Room: Room G405 (4F)
Presentation Type: Oral Presentation

All presentation times are UTC + 9 (Asia/Tokyo)

This paper examines whether large language models (LLMs) reproduce “affective stickiness” (Ahmed, 2014), the tendency of emotions such as fear, pity, or suspicion to adhere to racialized and gendered bodies, when generating narratives about Muslim women. While existing audits of AI bias often use isolated prompts, this study situates testing within the narrative contexts of the Nordic political thrillers Caliphate (Sweden, 2020) and Bullets (Finland, 2018). I ask how emotions attach to bodily cues, speech acts, and objects surrounding Muslim-identified female characters, and whether these attachments shift when identity markers are changed or removed. Two complementary experiments combine narrative prompting, attribution analysis, and sentence-embedding comparison (SBERT). In the first, identical scenes featuring different character identities are extended by ChatGPT, LLaMA, and Mistral to reveal how identity influences emotional tone. In the second, models describe what stands out about characters in existing scenes, allowing comparison between explicit attributions and generative behavior, supported by cosine similarity across affective embeddings. Preliminary findings indicate that LLMs consistently associate fear and suspicion with Muslim-identified characters, especially through carriers such as hijab or bag, while similar objects linked to Nordic women remain neutral. These results suggest that affective bias persists even under content-safety constraints. By adapting affect theory for computational analysis, this study offers a new, scene-based framework for reading how AI systems reproduce or reconfigure emotional patterns embedded in cultural media. It connects narrative humanities and model auditing, showing how stereotypes endure not only in words but in affective attachments that shape AI storytelling.

Authors:
Aida Gholami, University of Leiden, Netherlands


About the Presenter(s)
Aida Gholami, PhD candidate at Leiden University (LUCAS & LIACS). Interests include LLMs and bias, affective computing, AI ethics, media, and stereotypes.

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Posted by James Alexander Gordon

Last updated: 2023-02-23 23:45:00