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Emoji can facilitate recognition of conveyed indirect meaning
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In: PLoS One (2020)
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What's power got to do with it? : linguistic differences and detection of text message white lies as a function of power ; White lie texting
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Are you who I think you say you are? : effects of linguistic abstraction on applicant evaluation using third party descriptions ; Linguistic abstraction
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Terror management theory and politeness : the effects of mortality salience on preferences for proper linguistic etiquette
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The role of the right hemisphere in processing sarcasm in Asperger's disorder ; Role of RH in processing sarcasm in AD
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Hemispheric lateralization and sarcasm processing : the role of context and prosody ; Prosody and context in sarcasm
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Abstract:
A dichotic listening task was used to investigate the lateralization of sarcasm processing. Thirty-nine right-handed students were asked to identify which ear heard sarcastic and sincere phrases. Prosody and discourse context were simultaneously manipulated. For some trials, participants heard only the short prosodic phrases, while on other trials participants heard short vignettes prior to the phrases, which provided a context that primed either literal (sincere) or non-literal (sarcastic) interpretation. Contrary to Voyer et al. (2008), there were no differences in accuracy between the two hemispheres. However, when discourse context and prosody did not match, there was a significant right hemisphere advantage for sarcasm recognition and a left hemisphere advantage for the recognition of sincere utterances. ; Department of Psychological Science ; Thesis (M.A.)
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Keyword:
Cerebral hemispheres; Context (Linguistics); Irony; Neurolinguistics; Prosodic analysis (Linguistics)
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URL: http://liblink.bsu.edu/catkey/1607097 http://cardinalscholar.bsu.edu/handle/123456789/193312
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Linguistic Correlates of Asymmetric Motor Symptom Severity in Parkinson's Disease
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