학술논문

Emoji Identification and Emoji Effects on Sentence Emotionality in ASD-Diagnosed Adults and Neurotypical Controls.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Autism & Developmental Disorders. Jun2023, Vol. 53 Issue 6, p2514-2528. 15p. 4 Charts, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*SEASONAL affective disorder
*EMPATHY
*FEAR
*AUTISM
*EMOTIONS
*SOCIAL skills
*EMOTICONS & emojis
*ADULTS
Language
ISSN
0162-3257
Abstract
We investigated ASD-diagnosed adults' and neurotypical (NT) controls' processing of emoji and emoji influence on the emotionality of otherwise-neutral sentences. Study 1 participants categorised emoji representing the six basic emotions using a fixed-set of emotional adjectives. Results showed that ASD-diagnosed participants' classifications of fearful, sad, and surprised emoji were more diverse and less 'typical' than NT controls' responses. Study 2 participants read emotionally-neutral sentences; half paired with sentence-final happy emoji, half with sad emoji. Participants rated sentence + emoji stimuli for emotional valence. ASD-diagnosed and NT participants rated sentences + happy emoji as equally-positive, however, ASD-diagnosed participants rated sentences + sad emoji as more-negative than NT participants. We must acknowledge differential perceptions and effects of emoji, and emoji-text inter-relationships, when working with neurodiverse stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]