Impact du numérique sur les processus sociocognitifs L2Info

Emoticons in mind: an event-related potential study

Contenu

Titre

Emoticons in mind: an event-related potential study
Social Neuroscience

Créateur

Owen Churches
Mike Nicholls
Myra Thiessen
Mark Kohler
Hannah Keage

Sujet

Adaptation, Physiological
Cerebral Cortex
Electroencephalography
Emotions
Evoked Potentials
Female
Humans
Male
Pattern Recognition, Visual
Photic Stimulation
Reaction Time

Résumé

It is now common practice, in digital communication, to use the character combination ":-)", known as an emoticon, to indicate a smiling face. Although emoticons are readily interpreted as smiling faces, it is unclear whether emoticons trigger face-specific mechanisms or whether separate systems are utilized. A hallmark of face perception is the utilization of regions in the occipitotemporal cortex, which are sensitive to configural processing. We recorded the N170 event-related potential to investigate the way in which emoticons are perceived. Inverting faces produces a larger and later N170 while inverting objects which are perceived featurally rather than configurally reduces the amplitude of the N170. We presented 20 participants with images of upright and inverted faces, emoticons and meaningless strings of characters. Emoticons showed a large amplitude N170 when upright and a decrease in amplitude when inverted, the opposite pattern to that shown by faces. This indicates that when upright, emoticons are processed in occipitotemporal sites similarly to faces due to their familiar configuration. However, the characters which indicate the physiognomic features of emoticons are not recognized by the more laterally placed facial feature detection systems used in processing inverted faces.

volume

9

numéro

2

pages

196-202

Date

2014

Titre abrégé

Soc Neurosci
Emoticons in mind

Langue

eng

doi

10.1080/17470919.2013.873737

issn

1747-0927