Emoji semantics/pragmatics: investigating commitment and lying

Benjamin Weissman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This paper presents the results of two experiments investigating the directness of emoji in constituting speaker meaning. This relationship is examined in two ways, with Experiment 1 testing whether speakers are committed to meanings they communicate via a single emoji and Experiment 2 testing whether that speaker is taken to have lied if that meaning is false and intended to deceive. Results indicate that emoji with high meaning agreement in general (i.e., pictorial representations of concrete objects or foods) reliably commit the speaker to that meaning and can constitute lying. Expressive emoji representing facial expressions and emotional states demonstrate a range of commitment and lie ratings: those with high meaning agreement constitute more commitment and more of a lie than those with less meaning agreement in the first place. Emoji can constitute speaker commitment and they can be lies, but this result does not apply uniformly to all emoji and is instead tied to agreement, conventionality, and lexicalization.
表情符号语义/语用学:调查承诺和说谎
本文介绍了两个研究表情符号构成说话人意义的直接性的实验结果。这种关系通过两种方式进行检验,实验1测试说话者是否致力于通过单个表情符号传达的含义,实验2测试如果该含义是错误的,并有意欺骗,说话者是否被认为撒谎。结果表明,通常意义一致性高的表情符号(即具体物体或食物的图形表示)可靠地使说话者相信该含义,并可能构成说谎。代表面部表情和情绪状态的表情符号展示了一系列的承诺和谎言评级:那些意义一致性高的人比那些意义一致性较低的人更愿意承诺,更愿意撒谎。表情符号可以构成说话人的承诺,也可以是谎言,但这一结果并不适用于所有表情符号,而是与协议、惯例和词汇化有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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