Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone

Technology often mediates, and thus influences, patterns of human communication. Mobile phones have recently improved, most notably, full keypad touchscreen smartphones. Fifty university students send text messages with a traditional multi-press alphanumeric keypad mobile phone and a full keypad tou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kent, Sarah, Johnson, Genevieve
Format: Journal Article
Published: Scottish Group of Education and Testing Services 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scottishjournal.co.uk/paper/SJASS_Vol.7_No.1.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4431
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author Kent, Sarah
Johnson, Genevieve
author_facet Kent, Sarah
Johnson, Genevieve
author_sort Kent, Sarah
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Technology often mediates, and thus influences, patterns of human communication. Mobile phones have recently improved, most notably, full keypad touchscreen smartphones. Fifty university students send text messages with a traditional multi-press alphanumeric keypad mobile phone and a full keypad touchscreen smartphone. Compared to messages sent via multi-press mobile phones, smartphone messages where longer, contained fewer number/letter homophones (e.g., cu rather than see you) and contained more punctuation and fewer misspelled words. Nonetheless, regardless of type of phone used, text messages evidenced use of the language form known as digitalk or textese, suggesting that keypad limitations cannot entirely explain the unique patterns of written communication associated with mobile phones.
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publishDate 2012
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-44312017-02-28T01:28:56Z Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone Kent, Sarah Johnson, Genevieve text message Mobile phone multi-press cell phone smartphone touchscreen Technology often mediates, and thus influences, patterns of human communication. Mobile phones have recently improved, most notably, full keypad touchscreen smartphones. Fifty university students send text messages with a traditional multi-press alphanumeric keypad mobile phone and a full keypad touchscreen smartphone. Compared to messages sent via multi-press mobile phones, smartphone messages where longer, contained fewer number/letter homophones (e.g., cu rather than see you) and contained more punctuation and fewer misspelled words. Nonetheless, regardless of type of phone used, text messages evidenced use of the language form known as digitalk or textese, suggesting that keypad limitations cannot entirely explain the unique patterns of written communication associated with mobile phones. 2012 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4431 http://scottishjournal.co.uk/paper/SJASS_Vol.7_No.1.pdf Scottish Group of Education and Testing Services fulltext
spellingShingle text message
Mobile phone
multi-press
cell phone
smartphone
touchscreen
Kent, Sarah
Johnson, Genevieve
Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title_full Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title_fullStr Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title_full_unstemmed Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title_short Differences in the Linguistic Features of Text Messages send with an Alphanumeric Multi-Press Keypad Mobile Phone versus a Full Keypad Touchscreen Smartphone
title_sort differences in the linguistic features of text messages send with an alphanumeric multi-press keypad mobile phone versus a full keypad touchscreen smartphone
topic text message
Mobile phone
multi-press
cell phone
smartphone
touchscreen
url http://scottishjournal.co.uk/paper/SJASS_Vol.7_No.1.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4431