Litcius/Paper detail

The role of emoticons in sarcasm comprehension in younger and older adults: Evidence from an eye-tracking experiment

Hannah Howman, Ruth Filik

2020Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We present an eye-tracking experiment examining moment-to-moment processes underlying the comprehension of emoticons. Younger (18–30) and older (65+) participants had their eye movements recorded while reading scenarios containing comments that were ambiguous between literal or sarcastic interpretations (e.g., But you’re so quick though). Comments were accompanied by wink emoticons or full stops. Results showed that participants read earlier parts of the wink scenarios faster than those with full stops, but then spent more time reading the text surrounding the emoticon. Thus, readers moved more quickly to the end of the text when there was a device that may aid interpretation but then spent more time processing the conflict between the superficially positive nature of the comment and the tone implied by the emoticon. Interestingly, the wink increased the likelihood of a sarcastic interpretation in younger adults only, suggesting that perceiver-related factors play an important role in emoticon interpretation.

Topics & Concepts

SarcasmInterpretation (philosophy)Eye trackingComprehensionPsychologyReading (process)Cognitive psychologyEye movementTone (literature)Reading comprehensionSocial psychologyLinguisticsArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceIronyNeurosciencePhilosophyDigital Communication and LanguageText Readability and SimplificationLanguage, Discourse, Communication Strategies
The role of emoticons in sarcasm comprehension in younger and older adults: Evidence from an eye-tracking experiment | Litcius