Irony is often related to humor, both in spoken and written language. One possibility is that humor arises once people reconcile the incongruity between what speakers say and imply when using irony. Humor automatically emerges in these cases given the release of tension following a momentary sense of disparity. Our claim is that this proposal does not capture many of the dynamic complexities in real-world ironic discourse. We describe psychological research on irony understanding showing that ironic meanings are not always understood via a process of drawing conversational implicatures. Studies on people's spontaneous laughter when using irony suggest that the recognition of incongruity between what is said and implied is not necessary for ...
This chapter attempts to elucidate some of the mechanisms that underlie the production and comprehen...
Human laughter has long been a subject of scholarly interest, but counter to commonly held assumptio...
Irony refers to a phenomenon in which people say something they do not really mean. Numerous empiric...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter is informative about mental states and able to affect the meaning of our utterances. We pro...
Laughter is informative about mental states and able to affect the meaning of our utterances. We pro...
he aim of the paper is fourfold: (a) show why humor scholars should study irony, (b) explore the nee...
The way we speak can reveal much about what we intend to communicate, but the words we use often onl...
The way we speak can reveal much about what we intend to communicate, but the words we use often onl...
International audienceVerbal irony relies on contrast, that is, incongruity between the situational ...
Human communication often involves the use of figurative language, such as verbal irony or sarcasm, ...
This chapter attempts to elucidate some of the mechanisms that underlie the production and comprehen...
Verbal irony constitutes a rough class of indirect intentional communication involving a complex int...
This chapter attempts to elucidate some of the mechanisms that underlie the production and comprehen...
Human laughter has long been a subject of scholarly interest, but counter to commonly held assumptio...
Irony refers to a phenomenon in which people say something they do not really mean. Numerous empiric...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter performs multiple pragmatic functions in conversation (Glenn et Holt, 2013). It is often us...
Laughter is informative about mental states and able to affect the meaning of our utterances. We pro...
Laughter is informative about mental states and able to affect the meaning of our utterances. We pro...
he aim of the paper is fourfold: (a) show why humor scholars should study irony, (b) explore the nee...
The way we speak can reveal much about what we intend to communicate, but the words we use often onl...
The way we speak can reveal much about what we intend to communicate, but the words we use often onl...
International audienceVerbal irony relies on contrast, that is, incongruity between the situational ...
Human communication often involves the use of figurative language, such as verbal irony or sarcasm, ...
This chapter attempts to elucidate some of the mechanisms that underlie the production and comprehen...
Verbal irony constitutes a rough class of indirect intentional communication involving a complex int...
This chapter attempts to elucidate some of the mechanisms that underlie the production and comprehen...
Human laughter has long been a subject of scholarly interest, but counter to commonly held assumptio...
Irony refers to a phenomenon in which people say something they do not really mean. Numerous empiric...