The Lexicon of Emoji? Conventionality Modulates Processing of Emoji

Emoji have been ubiquitous in communication for over a decade, yet how they derive meaning remains underexplored. Here, we examine an aspect fundamental to linguistic meaning‐making: the degree to which emoji have conventional lexicalized meanings and whether that conventionalization affects process...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cognitive science 2023-04, Vol.47 (4), p.e13275-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Weissman, Benjamin, Engelen, Jan, Baas, Elise, Cohn, Neil
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container_title Cognitive science
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creator Weissman, Benjamin
Engelen, Jan
Baas, Elise
Cohn, Neil
description Emoji have been ubiquitous in communication for over a decade, yet how they derive meaning remains underexplored. Here, we examine an aspect fundamental to linguistic meaning‐making: the degree to which emoji have conventional lexicalized meanings and whether that conventionalization affects processing in real‐time. Experiment 1 establishes a range of meaning agreement levels across emoji within a population; Experiment 2 measures accuracy and response times to word‐emoji pairings in a match/mismatch task. In this experiment, we found that accuracy and response time both correlated significantly with the level of population‐wide meaning agreement from Experiment 1, suggesting that lexical access of single emoji may be comparable to that of words, even out of context. This is consistent with theories of a multimodal lexicon that stores links between meaning, structure, and modality in long‐term memory. Altogether, these findings suggest that emoji can allow a range of entrenched, lexicalized representations.
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Wiley Online Library Free Content; Education Source
subjects Communication
Emoji
Humans
Language
Language processing
Lexicon
Linguistics
Visual language
title The Lexicon of Emoji? Conventionality Modulates Processing of Emoji
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