4.4 Article

When It Pays to Be Insincere: On the Benefits of Verbal Irony

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Neurosciences

Mixed and ambiguous emotions can be studied with verbal irony

Valeria A. Pfeifer et al.

Summary: In this commentary, the authors argue that verbal irony offers rich opportunities to evoke and study mixed and ambiguous emotions, which have been largely neglected by both cognitive neuroscience and linguistic researchers. They suggest that considering verbal irony in the study of mixed and ambiguous emotions could be advantageous, especially for testing the MA-EM model.

COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (2023)

Article Psychology, Experimental

The Comprehension of Irony in High and Low Emotional Contexts

Valeria A. Pfeifer et al.

Summary: The study found that speakers using irony were perceived as being in a less negative and less aroused mental state regardless of context emotionality. Irony plays a crucial role in mitigating negative feelings, but in emotionally loaded situations, it requires more mental state processing or/and more speaker emotion processing.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE (2021)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Saying What You Don't Mean: A Cross-Cultural Study of Perceptions of Sarcasm

Dawn G. Blasko et al.

Summary: The study found that individuals from the U.S. and Mexico, which are higher in individualism and lower in power distance, reported more frequent use of sarcasm compared to respondents from China, which has higher power distance and collectivism. The most common reasons for using sarcasm in all three countries were to be funny and to have fun with friends.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE (2021)

Article Psychology, Experimental

Teaching Sarcasm: Evaluating Metapragmatic Training for Typically Developing Children

Kate Lee et al.

Summary: Sarcasm is a common form of social language, but it can be challenging for children to understand. This study found that training can enhance children's ability to understand sarcasm, particularly for those who are not already proficient in sarcasm understanding. The findings suggest that training could be effective in improving sarcasm comprehension in populations struggling with this aspect of language.

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE (2021)

Article Management

Using Verbal Irony to Move on with Controversial Issues

Winston Kwon et al.

ORGANIZATION SCIENCE (2020)

Article Psychology, Biological

The ability to recognise emotions predicts the time-course of sarcasm processing: Evidence from eye movements

Henri Olkoniemi et al.

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (2019)

Article Communication

Global Second Language Proficiency Predicts Self-Perceptions of General Sarcasm Use Among Bilingual Adults

Mehrgol Tiv et al.

JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY (2019)

Article Linguistics

Context, facial expression and prosody in irony processing

Gaetane Deliens et al.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2018)

Article Linguistics

The emotional impact of verbal irony: Eye-tracking evidence for a two-stage process

Ruth Filik et al.

JOURNAL OF MEMORY AND LANGUAGE (2017)

Article Psychology, Multidisciplinary

Don't Get Me Wrong: ERP Evidence from Cueing Communicative Intentions

Stefanie Regel et al.

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY (2017)

Article Psychology, Applied

The highest form of intelligence: Sarcasm increases creativity for both expressers and recipients

Li Huang et al.

ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR AND HUMAN DECISION PROCESSES (2015)

Article Psychology, Educational

Ironic Expression Can Simultaneously Enhance and Dilute Perception of Criticism

James Boylan et al.

DISCOURSE PROCESSES (2013)

Article Linguistics

Type of evaluation and marking of irony: The role of perceived complexity and comprehension

Christian Burgers et al.

JOURNAL OF PRAGMATICS (2012)

Article Psychology, Educational

Further development in social reasoning revealed in discourse irony understanding

Eva Filippova et al.

CHILD DEVELOPMENT (2008)

Article Psychology, Clinical

The neuroanatomical basis of understanding sarcasm and its relationship to social cognition

SG Shamay-Tsoory et al.

NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (2005)

Article Communication

Asymmetries in the use of verbal irony

RJ Kreuz et al.

JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY (2002)