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Conveying Emotions Through CMC: A Comparative Study of Memoji, Emoji, and Human Face KCI 등재

  • 언어ENG
  • URLhttps://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/430326
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감성과학 (Korean Journal of the science of Emotion & sensibility)
한국감성과학회 (The Korean Society For Emotion & Sensibility)
초록

Emojis and avatars are widely used in online communications, but their emotional conveyance lacks research. This study aims to contribute to the field of emotional expression in computer-mediated communication (CMC) by exploring the effectiveness of emotion recognition, the intensity of perceived emotions, and the perceived preferences for emojis and avatars as emotional expression tools. The following were used as stimuli: 12 photographs from the Yonsei-Face database, 12 Memojis that reflected the photographs, and 6 iOS emojis. The results of this study indicate that emojis outperformed other forms of emotional expression in terms of conveying emotions, intensity, and preference. Indeed, the study findings confirm that emojis remain the dominant form of emotional signals in CMC. In contrast, the study revealed that Memojis were inadequate as an expressive emotional cue. Participants did not perceive Memojis to effectively convey emotions compared with other forms of expression, such as emojis or real human faces. This suggests room for improvement in the design and implementation of Memojis to enhance their effectiveness in accurately conveying intended emotions. Addressing the limitations of Memojis and exploring ways to optimize their emotional expressiveness necessitate further research and development in avatar design.

목차
1. INTRODUCTION
2. METHOD
    2.1. Design
    2.2. Participants
    2.3. Stimuli
    2.4. Measures
    2.5. Procedure
3. RESULTS
    3.1. Emotion Recognition
    3.2. Intensity
    3.3. Perceived Preference
4. DISCUSSION
5. CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
저자
  • Eojin Kim(Gradueate School Student, Department of Psychology, Yonsei University)
  • Yunsun Alice Hong(Graduate School Student, Department of Psychology, Yonsei University)
  • Kwanghee Han(Kwanghee Han: Professor, Department of Psychology, Yonsei University) Corresponding author