Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation

Theories of sarcasm comprehension make different predictions regarding how various linguistic and contextual factors might affect the processing of written sarcasm. Modular theories predict a processing difficulty associated with sarcastic remarks (the standard pragmatic model), especially unfamilia...

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Main Author: Turcan, Alexandra
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32036/
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author Turcan, Alexandra
author_facet Turcan, Alexandra
author_sort Turcan, Alexandra
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Theories of sarcasm comprehension make different predictions regarding how various linguistic and contextual factors might affect the processing of written sarcasm. Modular theories predict a processing difficulty associated with sarcastic remarks (the standard pragmatic model), especially unfamiliar ones (the graded salience hypothesis) as compared to literal language, irrespective of contextual factors. Interactive theories however, predict that contextual factors can facilitate sarcasm processing, for example echoing an antecedent (the echoic mention theory), making the speaker’s expectation explicit (the implicit display theory), or a variety of other factors (the constraint satisfaction model). The present research systematically manipulated utterance literality (Experiments 1-7), utterance familiarity (Experiments 2 and 6), echo (Experiments 1 and 2), speaker’s expectation (Experiments 4 and 6), and speaker’s communicative style (Experiment 7), and used eye-tracking while reading to investigate their effect on sarcasm processing. Results indicated that (1) sarcastic comments were not always more difficult to process than literal ones, (2) utterance familiarity, echoing a contextual antecedent, and knowing the speaker’s communicative style, all aided sarcasm comprehension, while, (3) making the speaker’s expectation explicit did not. Taken together, the present results are better accommodated by interactive theories of language processing, and more specifically by the constraint satisfaction model. However, the constraint satisfaction model is not a testable theory in its current formulation, hence suggestions are made for ways of better specifying it, in order to develop it into a testable and comprehensive theory of sarcasm processing.
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spelling nottingham-320362025-02-28T11:46:42Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32036/ Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation Turcan, Alexandra Theories of sarcasm comprehension make different predictions regarding how various linguistic and contextual factors might affect the processing of written sarcasm. Modular theories predict a processing difficulty associated with sarcastic remarks (the standard pragmatic model), especially unfamiliar ones (the graded salience hypothesis) as compared to literal language, irrespective of contextual factors. Interactive theories however, predict that contextual factors can facilitate sarcasm processing, for example echoing an antecedent (the echoic mention theory), making the speaker’s expectation explicit (the implicit display theory), or a variety of other factors (the constraint satisfaction model). The present research systematically manipulated utterance literality (Experiments 1-7), utterance familiarity (Experiments 2 and 6), echo (Experiments 1 and 2), speaker’s expectation (Experiments 4 and 6), and speaker’s communicative style (Experiment 7), and used eye-tracking while reading to investigate their effect on sarcasm processing. Results indicated that (1) sarcastic comments were not always more difficult to process than literal ones, (2) utterance familiarity, echoing a contextual antecedent, and knowing the speaker’s communicative style, all aided sarcasm comprehension, while, (3) making the speaker’s expectation explicit did not. Taken together, the present results are better accommodated by interactive theories of language processing, and more specifically by the constraint satisfaction model. However, the constraint satisfaction model is not a testable theory in its current formulation, hence suggestions are made for ways of better specifying it, in order to develop it into a testable and comprehensive theory of sarcasm processing. 2016-07-19 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32036/1/Studying%20the%20online%20comprehension%20of%20written%20sarcasm%20-%20An%20eye-tracking%20investigation%20%28Alexandra%20Turcan%29.pdf Turcan, Alexandra (2016) Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham.
spellingShingle Turcan, Alexandra
Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title_full Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title_fullStr Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title_full_unstemmed Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title_short Studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
title_sort studying the online comprehension of written sarcasm: an eye-tracking investigation
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32036/