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Emoji and Indirect Replies
Principal Investigator(s): View help for Principal Investigator(s) THOMAS HOLTGRAVES, Ball State University
Version: View help for Version V1
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Project Citation:
HOLTGRAVES, THOMAS. Emoji and Indirect Replies. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2020-02-20. https://doi.org/10.3886/E117002V1
Project Description
Summary:
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In face-to-face
communication there are multiple paralinguistic and gestural features that
facilitate recognition of a speaker’s intended meaning, features that are
lacking when people communicate digitally (e.g., texting). As a result, substitutes have emerged
(expressive punctuation, capitalization, etc.) to facilitate communication in
these situations. However, little is
known about the comprehension processes involved in digital communication. In this research we examined the role of
emoji in the comprehension of face-threatening, indirect replies. Participants in two experiments read question
– reply sequences and then judged the accuracy of interpretations of the
replies. On critical trials the reply
violated the relation maxim and conveyed a negative, face-threatening
response. On one-third of the trials the
reply contained only text, on one-third of the trials the reply contained text
and an emoji, and on one-third of the trials the reply contained only an
emoji. When the question requested
potentially negative information about one of the interactants (disclosures and
opinions), participants were more likely to endorse the indirect meaning of the
reply, and did so faster, when the reply contained an emoji than when it did
not. This effect did not occur when the
question was a request for action, a more conventional type of indirect
reply. Overall, then, this research
demonstrates that emoji can sometimes facilitate the comprehension of
meaning. Future research is needed to
examine the boundary conditions for this effect.
Keywords: Emoji, language processing, indirect meaning, relation violation
Keywords: Emoji, language processing, indirect meaning, relation violation
Funding Sources:
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National Science Foundation ((BCS-1917631))
Scope of Project
Collection Date(s):
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8/20/2018 – 12/15/2018 (Study 1: Fall 2018);
8/20/2019 – 12/15/2019 (Study 2: Fall 2019)
Methodology
Collection Mode(s):
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other
Related Publications
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