表情符号
讽刺
理解力
心理学
背景(考古学)
心理语言学
计算机科学
语言学
社会化媒体
认知
神经科学
生物
哲学
万维网
古生物学
作者
Benjamin Weissman,Darren Tanner
出处
期刊:PLOS ONE
[Public Library of Science]
日期:2018-08-15
卷期号:13 (8): e0201727-e0201727
被引量:101
标识
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0201727
摘要
Emojis are ideograms that are becoming ubiquitous in digital communication. However, no research has yet investigated how humans process semantic and pragmatic content of emojis in real time. We investigated neural responses to irony-producing emojis, the question being whether emoji-generated irony is processed similarly to word-generated irony. Previous ERP studies have routinely found P600 effects to verbal irony. Our research sought to identify whether the same neural responses could also be elicited by emoji-induced irony. In three experiments, participants read sentences that ended in either a congruent, incongruent, or ironic (wink) emoji. Results across all three experiments demonstrated clear P600 effects, the amplitudes of which were correlated with participants' tendency to treat the emoji as a marker of irony, as indicated by behavioral comprehension question responses. These ironic wink emojis also elicited a strong P200 effect, also found in studies of verbal irony processing. Moreover, unexpected emojis (both mismatch and ironic emoji) also elicited late frontal positivities, which have been implicated processing unpredicted words in context. These results are the first to identify how linguistically-relevant ideograms are processed in real-time at the neural level, and specifically draw parallels between the processing of word- and emoji-induced irony.
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