Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages

In contrast with face-to-face conversations, text messages lack important extra-linguistic cues such as tone of voice and gestures. We ask how texters are able to communicate the same nuanced social and emotional meaning without access to this rich set of multimodal cues. The current paper expands o...

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Main Authors: Rachel C. Poirier, Andrew M. Cook, Celia M. Klin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1410698/full
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author Rachel C. Poirier
Andrew M. Cook
Celia M. Klin
author_facet Rachel C. Poirier
Andrew M. Cook
Celia M. Klin
author_sort Rachel C. Poirier
collection DOAJ
description In contrast with face-to-face conversations, text messages lack important extra-linguistic cues such as tone of voice and gestures. We ask how texters are able to communicate the same nuanced social and emotional meaning without access to this rich set of multimodal cues. The current paper expands on previous work examining the role of one particular textism, the period, and found that the inclusion of a period after a -word text (yup.) could convey abruptness, or insincerity. Across three experiments, we used a rating scale to examine. Exchange (No. just. go.) as well as breaking the exchange into a series of single- word texts ([no] [just] [go]) conveyed emotions such as disgust and frustration. These textisms may have mimicked prosody, influencing readers’ understanding of the emotionality of the message. More generally, the results demonstrate that texters make use of a variety of textisms to communicate social and emotional information.
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institution Kabale University
issn 1664-1078
language English
publishDate 2025-02-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
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spelling doaj-art-4840626e0faf483d90e4791fa0886ec22025-02-10T13:52:28ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782025-02-011610.3389/fpsyg.2025.14106981410698Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messagesRachel C. PoirierAndrew M. CookCelia M. KlinIn contrast with face-to-face conversations, text messages lack important extra-linguistic cues such as tone of voice and gestures. We ask how texters are able to communicate the same nuanced social and emotional meaning without access to this rich set of multimodal cues. The current paper expands on previous work examining the role of one particular textism, the period, and found that the inclusion of a period after a -word text (yup.) could convey abruptness, or insincerity. Across three experiments, we used a rating scale to examine. Exchange (No. just. go.) as well as breaking the exchange into a series of single- word texts ([no] [just] [go]) conveyed emotions such as disgust and frustration. These textisms may have mimicked prosody, influencing readers’ understanding of the emotionality of the message. More generally, the results demonstrate that texters make use of a variety of textisms to communicate social and emotional information.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1410698/fullcomputer-mediated communicationCMCtextingtext messaginglanguage processinglanguage comprehension
spellingShingle Rachel C. Poirier
Andrew M. Cook
Celia M. Klin
Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
Frontiers in Psychology
computer-mediated communication
CMC
texting
text messaging
language processing
language comprehension
title Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
title_full Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
title_fullStr Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
title_full_unstemmed Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
title_short Read. This. Slowly: mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
title_sort read this slowly mimicking spoken pauses in text messages
topic computer-mediated communication
CMC
texting
text messaging
language processing
language comprehension
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1410698/full
work_keys_str_mv AT rachelcpoirier readthisslowlymimickingspokenpausesintextmessages
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AT celiamklin readthisslowlymimickingspokenpausesintextmessages