Searching for "Sarcasm" – sorted by Relevance.
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Lexical Influences on the Perception of Sarcasm
- Lexical Influences on the Perception of Sarcasm Roger J. Kreuz Gina M. Caucci Department
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Yeah right”: Sarcasm recognition for spoken dialogue systems
- “YEAH RIGHT”: SARCASM RECOGNITION FOR SPOKEN DIALOGUE SYSTEMS Joseph Tepperman 1 , David Traum 2
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c○2007 The Association for Computational Linguistics
- , such as humor, irony, sarcasm, affection, etc. Figurative language can be found not only in fiction, but also
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Egocentrism Over E-Mail: Can We Communicate as Well as We Think?
- , without the paralinguistic cues that in voice communication flag sarcasm, may not. And because it can
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Say not to Say:
- sarcasm is directly linked to people's feelings of anger and loss of selfesteem [1, 2]. Some individuals
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Abstract
- the personality of the sender and have no comprehension of the writing context. For example, sarcasm could
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Annotating Attributions and Private States
- explicitly stating that they are frustrated, angry, etc. Sarcasm and irony often involve expressive
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Verbal irony use in face-to-face and computer-mediated conversations
- settings. Keywords: irony; sarcasm; figurative language; computer-mediated communication One
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The impacts of emoticons on message interpretation in computer-mediated communication
- range of communication ...;sarcasm, for example, is not well expressed on electronic mail” (p. 686). Due
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Humor and Irony in Interaction: From Mode Adoption to Failure of Detection,’’ in Say Not to Say: New Perspectives on Miscommunication, edited by
- . This state of affairs is probably motivated by the fact that terms such as humor, irony, sarcasm, funny
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