Speakers signal sarcastic intent in a variety of ways, including the words they use and the tone of voice they employ. In this paper, we investigate whether facial cues are also used to indicate sarcastic intent. Participants were audioand videotaped as they engaged in tasks designed to elicit sarcasm. In order to assess how facial cues differed in terms of common ground, participant pairs were divided into pairs of friends and strangers. We provide evidence that sarcasm is also signaled by a variety of facial cues, such as movement of the head, eyes, and mouth, and these cues are more commonly employed by friends than by strangers. © Walter de Gruyter
Abstract The present paper is concerned with the knowledge or cognitive repre-sentations which indiv...
This study aimed to investigate the emotional impact of sarcasm. Previous research in this area has ...
Prior research suggests an egocentric bias in the ability to adopt a third-person perspective in sar...
Speakers signal sarcastic intent in a variety of ways, including the words they use and the tone of ...
International audienceVerbal irony is a rhetorical device that is not only verbal but also paraverba...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that speakers often gaze away from their listeners during sarcastic utte...
Sarcasm production and comprehension have been traditionally described in terms of pragmatic factors...
Sarcasm is a difficult concept to define accurately and completely and is similarly hard to identify...
This research examined the effect of pitch variation, in 30-Hertz intervals, on the interpretation o...
Sarcasm is a complex multimodal phenomenon that can be difficult to detect even in face-to-face comm...
A model of sarcasm interpretation must account for all instances of sarcasm, including sarcastic que...
Sarcasm is a complex phenomenon of indirect speech, when we intend a meaning different from that of ...
Two studies using multimodal stimuli collected from television situation comedies show that there ...
Speakers use a range of cues to signal ironic intent, including cues based on contrast with context,...
Sarcasm as a linguistic strategy is a universal property of all languages which means it can be foun...
Abstract The present paper is concerned with the knowledge or cognitive repre-sentations which indiv...
This study aimed to investigate the emotional impact of sarcasm. Previous research in this area has ...
Prior research suggests an egocentric bias in the ability to adopt a third-person perspective in sar...
Speakers signal sarcastic intent in a variety of ways, including the words they use and the tone of ...
International audienceVerbal irony is a rhetorical device that is not only verbal but also paraverba...
Anecdotal evidence suggests that speakers often gaze away from their listeners during sarcastic utte...
Sarcasm production and comprehension have been traditionally described in terms of pragmatic factors...
Sarcasm is a difficult concept to define accurately and completely and is similarly hard to identify...
This research examined the effect of pitch variation, in 30-Hertz intervals, on the interpretation o...
Sarcasm is a complex multimodal phenomenon that can be difficult to detect even in face-to-face comm...
A model of sarcasm interpretation must account for all instances of sarcasm, including sarcastic que...
Sarcasm is a complex phenomenon of indirect speech, when we intend a meaning different from that of ...
Two studies using multimodal stimuli collected from television situation comedies show that there ...
Speakers use a range of cues to signal ironic intent, including cues based on contrast with context,...
Sarcasm as a linguistic strategy is a universal property of all languages which means it can be foun...
Abstract The present paper is concerned with the knowledge or cognitive repre-sentations which indiv...
This study aimed to investigate the emotional impact of sarcasm. Previous research in this area has ...
Prior research suggests an egocentric bias in the ability to adopt a third-person perspective in sar...