This paper addresses a current theoretical debate between the standard pragmatic model, the graded salience hypothesis, and the implicit display theory, by investigating the roles of the context and of the properties of the sarcastic utterance itself in the comprehension of a sarcastic remark. Two eye-tracking experiments were conducted where we manipulated the speaker’s expectation in the context and the familiarity of the sarcastic remark. The results of the first eye-tracking study showed that literal comments were read faster than unfamiliar sarcastic comments, regardless of whether an explicit expectation was present in the context. The results of the second eye-tracking study indicated an early processing difficulty for unfamiliar sar...
AbstractA hearer's perception of an utterance as sarcastic depends on integration of the heard state...
This thesis examines whether the perception of sarcasm changes in the absence of intonation. It is b...
This graduation thesis deals with the comparison of sarcastic cues in spoken and everyday written on...
This paper addresses a current theoretical debate between the standard pragmatic model, the graded s...
A core feature of sarcasm is that there is a discrepancy between the literal meaning of the uttera...
Theorists have debated whether our ability to understand sarcasm is principally determined by the co...
Previous eye-tracking studies suggest that when resolving the meaning of sarcastic utterances in a...
Sarcasm understandability or the ability to understand textual sarcasm depends upon readers' languag...
We report an eye-tracking study in which we investigate the on-line processing of written irony. Spe...
Prior research suggests an egocentric bias in the ability to adopt a third-person perspective in sar...
Sarcasm production and comprehension have been traditionally described in terms of pragmatic factors...
The present study investigated whether exposure to sarcasm can predict a person’s categorization of ...
Most theorists agree that sarcasm serves some communicative function that would not be achieved by s...
A model of sarcasm interpretation must account for all instances of sarcasm, including sarcastic que...
Sarcasm is a difficult concept to define accurately and completely and is similarly hard to identify...
AbstractA hearer's perception of an utterance as sarcastic depends on integration of the heard state...
This thesis examines whether the perception of sarcasm changes in the absence of intonation. It is b...
This graduation thesis deals with the comparison of sarcastic cues in spoken and everyday written on...
This paper addresses a current theoretical debate between the standard pragmatic model, the graded s...
A core feature of sarcasm is that there is a discrepancy between the literal meaning of the uttera...
Theorists have debated whether our ability to understand sarcasm is principally determined by the co...
Previous eye-tracking studies suggest that when resolving the meaning of sarcastic utterances in a...
Sarcasm understandability or the ability to understand textual sarcasm depends upon readers' languag...
We report an eye-tracking study in which we investigate the on-line processing of written irony. Spe...
Prior research suggests an egocentric bias in the ability to adopt a third-person perspective in sar...
Sarcasm production and comprehension have been traditionally described in terms of pragmatic factors...
The present study investigated whether exposure to sarcasm can predict a person’s categorization of ...
Most theorists agree that sarcasm serves some communicative function that would not be achieved by s...
A model of sarcasm interpretation must account for all instances of sarcasm, including sarcastic que...
Sarcasm is a difficult concept to define accurately and completely and is similarly hard to identify...
AbstractA hearer's perception of an utterance as sarcastic depends on integration of the heard state...
This thesis examines whether the perception of sarcasm changes in the absence of intonation. It is b...
This graduation thesis deals with the comparison of sarcastic cues in spoken and everyday written on...