Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG

While the basic nature of irony is saying one thing and communicating the opposite, it may also serve additional social and emotional functions, such as projecting humour or anger. Emoticons often accompany irony in computer-mediated communication, and have been suggested to increase enjoyment of co...

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Main Authors: Thompson, Dominic, Mackenzie, Ian G., Leuthold, Hartmut, Filik, Ruth
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2016
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32382/
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author Thompson, Dominic
Mackenzie, Ian G.
Leuthold, Hartmut
Filik, Ruth
author_facet Thompson, Dominic
Mackenzie, Ian G.
Leuthold, Hartmut
Filik, Ruth
author_sort Thompson, Dominic
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description While the basic nature of irony is saying one thing and communicating the opposite, it may also serve additional social and emotional functions, such as projecting humour or anger. Emoticons often accompany irony in computer-mediated communication, and have been suggested to increase enjoyment of communication. In the current study, we aimed to examine on-line emotional responses to ironic vs. literal comments, and the influence of emoticons on this process. Participants read stories with a final comment that was either ironic or literal, praising or critical, and with or without an emoticon. We used psychophysiological measures to capture immediate emotional responses: electrodermal activity to directly measure arousal, and facial electromyography to detect muscle movements indicative of emotional expressions. Results showed higher arousal, reduced frowning, and enhanced smiling for messages with rather than without an emoticon, suggesting that emoticons increase positive emotions. A tendency towards less negative responses (i.e., reduced frowning and enhanced smiling) for ironic than literal criticism, and less positive responses (i.e., enhanced frowning and reduced smiling) for ironic than literal praise suggests that irony weakens the emotional impact of a message. The present findings indicate the utility of a psychophysiological approach in studying on-line emotional responses to written language.
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spelling nottingham-323822020-05-04T17:56:44Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32382/ Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG Thompson, Dominic Mackenzie, Ian G. Leuthold, Hartmut Filik, Ruth While the basic nature of irony is saying one thing and communicating the opposite, it may also serve additional social and emotional functions, such as projecting humour or anger. Emoticons often accompany irony in computer-mediated communication, and have been suggested to increase enjoyment of communication. In the current study, we aimed to examine on-line emotional responses to ironic vs. literal comments, and the influence of emoticons on this process. Participants read stories with a final comment that was either ironic or literal, praising or critical, and with or without an emoticon. We used psychophysiological measures to capture immediate emotional responses: electrodermal activity to directly measure arousal, and facial electromyography to detect muscle movements indicative of emotional expressions. Results showed higher arousal, reduced frowning, and enhanced smiling for messages with rather than without an emoticon, suggesting that emoticons increase positive emotions. A tendency towards less negative responses (i.e., reduced frowning and enhanced smiling) for ironic than literal criticism, and less positive responses (i.e., enhanced frowning and reduced smiling) for ironic than literal praise suggests that irony weakens the emotional impact of a message. The present findings indicate the utility of a psychophysiological approach in studying on-line emotional responses to written language. Wiley 2016-06-14 Article PeerReviewed Thompson, Dominic, Mackenzie, Ian G., Leuthold, Hartmut and Filik, Ruth (2016) Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG. Psychophysiology, 53 (7). pp. 1054-1062. ISSN 0048-5772 http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/psyp.12642/full doi:10.1111/psyp.12642 doi:10.1111/psyp.12642
spellingShingle Thompson, Dominic
Mackenzie, Ian G.
Leuthold, Hartmut
Filik, Ruth
Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title_full Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title_fullStr Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title_full_unstemmed Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title_short Emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from EDA and facial EMG
title_sort emotional responses to irony and emoticons in written language: evidence from eda and facial emg
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32382/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32382/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32382/