Last year a study was published around the usage of emojis in textual communication and personality traits. Unfortunately, I haven’t read the study paper as a whole but the analysis section and the summary provided by an article in the Austria newspaper Der Standard were quite interesting despite being limited to 285 participants at (presumably) a single location.| zerokspot.com
This study examines how the interaction between emoji (emotional vs semantic) and social media content (aesthetic experience vs promotion) influences …| www.sciencedirect.com
Today, using emojis makes it easier to add emotion, tone and what you intend to say in messages. Still, given that emojis are understood differently by age groups, there is a chance for misunderstandings. This paper looks into how emojis are interpreted differently by members of the millennial generation, Gen Z and the Baby Boomers. To understand how each generation views common emojis, we use surveys, gather discussions in focus groups and analyze how they are used on the internet. It is rev...| www.assajournal.com
Recent studies have found that people interpret emoji characters inconsistently, creating significant potential for miscommunication. However, this research examined emoji in isolation, without consideration of any surrounding text. Prior work has hypothesized that examining emoji in their natural textual contexts would substantially reduce potential for miscommunication. To investigate this hypothesis, we carried out a controlled study with 2,482 participants who interpreted emoji both in is...| ojs.aaai.org