Core Emotional Landscaping

Detecting the Complete Emotional Landscape
Beyond Surface Emotions

Most tools only detect basic positive or negative sentiment. Reasoner reveals the complete emotional landscape—including the contradictory emotions, hidden concerns, and subtle intensity shifts that determine how people really feel and what they’ll actually do.

How We Map Your Complete Emotional Reality

Reasoner detects not just what emotion someone expresses, but the complex layers beneath: the anxiety hiding under enthusiasm, the frustration masked by politeness, and the precise moments when confidence wavers or excitement peaks.

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Primary Emotion

The Dominant Emotional Tone

Identifies the main emotional state (positive, negative, neutral) with precise intensity, including subtle variations like “cautiously optimistic” or “reluctantly supportive”


What This Reveals: The core emotional foundation driving all communication and decision-making

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Secondary Emotions

Hidden Emotional Undercurrents

Detects underlying emotions that contradict surface sentiment—like anxiety beneath enthusiasm or frustration behind politeness


What This Reveals: The authentic feelings someone may not even realize they’re expressing

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Emotional Congruence

Consistency vs. Conflict

Measures whether emotions remain stable or shift unexpectedly, revealing authentic vs. performed sentiment


What This Reveals: When someone is being genuine versus when they’re managing their emotional expression

Real-World Example

What they say: “I’m excited about this opportunity”

What we detect: Primary emotion shows moderate positivity, but secondary emotions reveal underlying anxiety about timeline pressures, with emotional congruence indicating managed rather than authentic enthusiasm.

What this means: They want to be positive but have genuine concerns they’re not expressing directly.

The Complete Picture

Traditional sentiment analysis tells you someone is “positive” or “negative.” Reasoner shows you the full emotional reality: the excitement mixed with anxiety, the politeness masking frustration, the confidence that wavers at key moments, and the specific words that trigger the strongest reactions.

Why This Matters

Understanding the complete emotional landscape means you can respond to what people actually feel, not just what they say they feel. This leads to more authentic connections, better timing for important conversations, and the ability to address concerns before they become problems.