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Emoji love: The science behind why we

Mar10
by Sindy Cator on March 10, 2014 at 7:04 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Design & Dev

emoji art 520x245 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

Andrea Ayres-Deets is the Lead Writer at ooomf, an invite-only network connecting short-term software projects with handpicked developers and designers. Andrea writes about psychology, creativity, and business over on the ooomf blog.


I’ve never felt particularly comfortable in public spaces. I’m the person that plans interesting conversational topics ahead of time should I be forced to speak with someone at a party. I’m most comfortable in a corner somewhere shielded by a large potted plant. There is perhaps no finer embodiment of who I am than this:

01 sad emoticon 300x269 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

This is how I feel about 80 to 90 percent of the time. I can’t remember the last time I had a text-based conversation without the use of an emoticon.

Over a five-month period in 2013, emojis were used over 1.7 billion times on Twitter. What exactly is driving our use of emoticons? The answer is quite simple, they make us feel good.

Emoticon refers specifically to the representation of a facial expression formed using keyboard characters. Emoji is the Japanese style of smiley which literally translates into picture + letter. The pictographs most of us use today are based off of these.

There is something of an inevitability to our increasing reliance on emoticons. Language is always evolving. We continually look for better ways to communicate, express, and optimize thoughts and feelings. That’s exactly what emoticons allow us to do.

Emoticons make us better communicators

Humans are nothing if not social. So much so that we experience significant physical and psychological problems without social interaction. We base our identity off of feedback we receive from those around us. Krystal D’Costa of Scientific American says:

As social beings we require consistent and frequent confirmation of our social placement. This confirmation is vital to the preservation of our networks—we need to be able to gauge the state of our relationships with others.

Communicating face-to-face involves the use of non-verbal tools like: intonation, gestures, facial expressions, and body language. We use each of these to help us more accurately convey the message we want the other person to receive. When we communicate online or via mobile, we lack all of these tools.

You remember flame wars? Flame wars happened because of these missed social cues. We can also see these missed social cues in e-mails.

From: Andrea
To: You
RE: Your e-mail

Hi,

I am sure you thought that was funny. It wasn’t. I am morally offended.

Andrea

This was written very sarcastically. I could hear the exact intonation of the words perfectly, but chances are you didn’t. That’s because humans highly overestimate our ability to clearly communicate over e-mail. We are ego-driven and fail to consider others unique perceptions and background when we draft e-mail correspondence. This results in message misalignment. The emoticon helps to remedy this by expressing the meaning and context of what the author is saying.

To test how emoticons enrich our communication, researchers took a group of people and gave them a series of tasks to solve together. One group had access to six emoticons and the other group did not.

Screen Shot 2014 02 18 at 5.03.54 PM 1024x168 730x119 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

What the researchers found out is that when emoticons were available people almost always chose to use them. The use of emoticons also gave participants a greater feeling of satisfaction with their overall experience.

In the same way that nonverbal cues are used in face-to-face communication, we use emoticons to help reduce ambiguity and to intensify or tone down our emotional expression. We have a need to express our emotions. That need is partially fulfilled by emoticons.

Increase social intimacy

Good communication requires social intimacy. We build this by increasing the quantity of our communication and through the disclosure of personal details. Once thought to be impossible, social intimacy is now widespread through computer mediated communication.

It takes more than just sharing facts with someone to become close to them. We must also share our feelings and emotions with that person, it’s an integral part of how we build and maintain close relationships. Emoticons help us to do this more sincerely and freely.

It is not just the presence of the emoticon but the intention behind it that matters to us.

We recognize that someone took the time to choose to convey that particular emotion. The use of emoticons increases our intimacy with that person and as our use of emoticons increases so too does our perception of intimacy. A big part of increased social intimacy relies on mimicry.

Though most of us are not aware of it, we actually mimic each others expressions and emotions when speaking face-to-face. This is also called emotional contagion and it is all part of how we build that social connectedness.

Surely this can’t be possible with emoticons? Alas, but it is! Emerging research indicates when we see certain emoticons, our mood changes. When that happens, we alter our facial expressions to match the emotion of the emoticon. Often without knowing, we end up mimicking the emoticon.

How can the simple use of an emoticon makes such a difference to us?

Researchers at Tokyo Denki University, Japan found that the more graphic the emoticon, the more our brain responds to it. As the emoticon becomes less abstract (or more human like) the brain responds accordingly.

Yausa 1024x551 730x392 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

More graphic emoticons cause our brains to activate the temporal gyrus, which is responsible for recalling biological motions. That’s a real fancy way of saying when someone sends you this ‘icon wink Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons‘ it’s easier for our brains to see the wink happening than if you sent ‘ ; ).’

Our brain doesn’t have to fill in as many gaps in order to see that wink as occurring, which helps us imagine that it actually is. Even so, both regular emoticons and graphic emoticons are recognized and processed by the brain as nonverbal information.

Humans understand emoticons to be emotional communication, which results in the activation of the right frontal gyrus as seen above.

tumblr mppi0whhre1qcbtcqo1 500 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

Emoticons can provide us with some of the social well being, physical health, and emotional wellness that face to face communications have. As they continue to evolve, so will the benefits we derive from them.

So, I’ll never be that person at the party that everyone clamors to be around. I’m okay with that. The evolution of our language online has helped me to communicate a fuller, more dynamic spectrum, of who I am and what I care about. I’m able to do all of this in a way I simply can’t in public, at least not without crippling anxiety icon wink Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons. When words aren’t enough, emoticons are there to help me fill in the gap.

Top image credit: Emojinal Art

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Emoji love: The science behind why we

Mar10
by Sindy Cator on March 10, 2014 at 7:04 pm
Posted In: Analysis and Opinion, Around the Web, Design & Dev

emoji art 520x245 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

Andrea Ayres-Deets is the Lead Writer at ooomf, an invite-only network connecting short-term software projects with handpicked developers and designers. Andrea writes about psychology, creativity, and business over on the ooomf blog.


I’ve never felt particularly comfortable in public spaces. I’m the person that plans interesting conversational topics ahead of time should I be forced to speak with someone at a party. I’m most comfortable in a corner somewhere shielded by a large potted plant. There is perhaps no finer embodiment of who I am than this:

01 sad emoticon 300x269 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

This is how I feel about 80 to 90 percent of the time. I can’t remember the last time I had a text-based conversation without the use of an emoticon.

Over a five-month period in 2013, emojis were used over 1.7 billion times on Twitter. What exactly is driving our use of emoticons? The answer is quite simple, they make us feel good.

Emoticon refers specifically to the representation of a facial expression formed using keyboard characters. Emoji is the Japanese style of smiley which literally translates into picture + letter. The pictographs most of us use today are based off of these.

There is something of an inevitability to our increasing reliance on emoticons. Language is always evolving. We continually look for better ways to communicate, express, and optimize thoughts and feelings. That’s exactly what emoticons allow us to do.

Emoticons make us better communicators

Humans are nothing if not social. So much so that we experience significant physical and psychological problems without social interaction. We base our identity off of feedback we receive from those around us. Krystal D’Costa of Scientific American says:

As social beings we require consistent and frequent confirmation of our social placement. This confirmation is vital to the preservation of our networks—we need to be able to gauge the state of our relationships with others.

Communicating face-to-face involves the use of non-verbal tools like: intonation, gestures, facial expressions, and body language. We use each of these to help us more accurately convey the message we want the other person to receive. When we communicate online or via mobile, we lack all of these tools.

You remember flame wars? Flame wars happened because of these missed social cues. We can also see these missed social cues in e-mails.

From: Andrea
To: You
RE: Your e-mail

Hi,

I am sure you thought that was funny. It wasn’t. I am morally offended.

Andrea

This was written very sarcastically. I could hear the exact intonation of the words perfectly, but chances are you didn’t. That’s because humans highly overestimate our ability to clearly communicate over e-mail. We are ego-driven and fail to consider others unique perceptions and background when we draft e-mail correspondence. This results in message misalignment. The emoticon helps to remedy this by expressing the meaning and context of what the author is saying.

To test how emoticons enrich our communication, researchers took a group of people and gave them a series of tasks to solve together. One group had access to six emoticons and the other group did not.

Screen Shot 2014 02 18 at 5.03.54 PM 1024x168 730x119 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

What the researchers found out is that when emoticons were available people almost always chose to use them. The use of emoticons also gave participants a greater feeling of satisfaction with their overall experience.

In the same way that nonverbal cues are used in face-to-face communication, we use emoticons to help reduce ambiguity and to intensify or tone down our emotional expression. We have a need to express our emotions. That need is partially fulfilled by emoticons.

Increase social intimacy

Good communication requires social intimacy. We build this by increasing the quantity of our communication and through the disclosure of personal details. Once thought to be impossible, social intimacy is now widespread through computer mediated communication.

It takes more than just sharing facts with someone to become close to them. We must also share our feelings and emotions with that person, it’s an integral part of how we build and maintain close relationships. Emoticons help us to do this more sincerely and freely.

It is not just the presence of the emoticon but the intention behind it that matters to us.

We recognize that someone took the time to choose to convey that particular emotion. The use of emoticons increases our intimacy with that person and as our use of emoticons increases so too does our perception of intimacy. A big part of increased social intimacy relies on mimicry.

Though most of us are not aware of it, we actually mimic each others expressions and emotions when speaking face-to-face. This is also called emotional contagion and it is all part of how we build that social connectedness.

Surely this can’t be possible with emoticons? Alas, but it is! Emerging research indicates when we see certain emoticons, our mood changes. When that happens, we alter our facial expressions to match the emotion of the emoticon. Often without knowing, we end up mimicking the emoticon.

How can the simple use of an emoticon makes such a difference to us?

Researchers at Tokyo Denki University, Japan found that the more graphic the emoticon, the more our brain responds to it. As the emoticon becomes less abstract (or more human like) the brain responds accordingly.

Yausa 1024x551 730x392 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

More graphic emoticons cause our brains to activate the temporal gyrus, which is responsible for recalling biological motions. That’s a real fancy way of saying when someone sends you this ‘icon wink Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons‘ it’s easier for our brains to see the wink happening than if you sent ‘ ; ).’

Our brain doesn’t have to fill in as many gaps in order to see that wink as occurring, which helps us imagine that it actually is. Even so, both regular emoticons and graphic emoticons are recognized and processed by the brain as nonverbal information.

Humans understand emoticons to be emotional communication, which results in the activation of the right frontal gyrus as seen above.

tumblr mppi0whhre1qcbtcqo1 500 Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons

Emoticons can provide us with some of the social well being, physical health, and emotional wellness that face to face communications have. As they continue to evolve, so will the benefits we derive from them.

So, I’ll never be that person at the party that everyone clamors to be around. I’m okay with that. The evolution of our language online has helped me to communicate a fuller, more dynamic spectrum, of who I am and what I care about. I’m able to do all of this in a way I simply can’t in public, at least not without crippling anxiety icon wink Emoji love: The science behind why we <3 emoticons. When words aren’t enough, emoticons are there to help me fill in the gap.

Top image credit: Emojinal Art

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Sonos will forward-publish its patent applications before they are public to inspire other inventions

Mar10
by Sindy Cator on March 10, 2014 at 5:38 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Sonos today announced plans to “forward-publish” its patent applications well before they are available to the public, with the hope they will help other individuals and companies looking to invent technologies that improve the overall music experience. The electronics company says it is making one exception for its new rule: applications that cover inventions not yet in publicly available Sonos products.

Here is the company’s reasoning for the policy change:

We know that others can – and will – benefit from the time, energy and investment we have put into our patented inventions, not to mention our products themselves. And we welcome that learning, but with an honorable caveat: use it to create differentiated products, rather than merely incorporating or copying our invention without our permission. While we recognize the existence of abuses in the marketplace that cross this ethical line, we still believe patents can and should be used for the benefit of all – by helping accelerate innovation.

You can view all of Sonos’ published US patents and patent applications at the link below. Eventually, that page will also include its forward-published applications.

➤ Sonos Patents

See also – How Sonos completely changed my music listening habits and Sonos Play:1 review: Rich sound at a humble price

└ Tags: media, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Edward Snowden addresses SXSW, arguing that his actions were in defense of the US constitution

Mar10
by Sindy Cator on March 10, 2014 at 5:24 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

snowdencrop1 520x245 Edward Snowden addresses SXSW, arguing that his actions were in defense of the US constitution

The SXSW team will have drawn the envy of conference organizers around the world today after NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden took part in a ‘virtual conversation’ via video link.

Speaking via a Google Hangout and apparently routed through seven proxies from his current location in Russia, Snowden said that he’d chosen to speak first to the technology community rather than the policy community because security services are “setting fire to the future of the Internet” and attendees at SXSW are “firefighters.”

Snowden said that his actions were in line with the oath he took as an NSA contractor to defend the constitution. “Would I do this again? The answer is absolutely yes. Regardless of what happens to me, this is something we had a right to know. I took an oath to support and defend the constitution, and I saw the constitution was violated on a massive scale.”

“When I went public with this, it wasn’t so I could single-handedly change the government, tell them what to do and override what the public thinks is proper. What I wanted to do was to inform the public, so they could make a decision [and] provide their consent for what we should be doing.”

Snowden discussed the need for more accessible secure communication tools. Referencing journalist Glenn Greenwald’s famous difficulty to install PGP when beginning discussions with Snowden, he said that the next generation of these apps need to “pass the Greenwald test… How can we enforce these protections in a simple, cheap and effective way that’s invisible to users?”

“End-to-end encryption, where it’s from my computer directly to your computer, makes mass surveillance impossible at the network level without a crypto-breaker – and they are incredibly rare, normally don’t work and are very expensive,” said Snowden.

“If they want to gather somebody’s communications, they have to target them specifically. They can’t just target everybody all the time and then when they want to read your stuff they go back in a time machine and say ‘what did they say in 2006?’ They can’t pitch exploits at every computer in the world without getting caught. That’s the value of end-to-end encryption and that’s what we need to be thinking about.”

2014 03 10 11.36.48 730x547 Edward Snowden addresses SXSW, arguing that his actions were in defense of the US constitution

Snowden criticized the “lack of focus” in monitoring everyone’s communication rather than focusing on suspects because it causes the security services to misdirect their attention away from real crimes such as last year’s Boston Marathon bombing.

Responding to a question emailed in from Tim Berners-Lee, creator of the World Wide Web, Snowden decried the US government’s lack of interest in holding the NSA to account. “We really need public advocates. We need public representatives. We need public oversight. Some way for trusted public figures… to advocate for us and to protect the structure and make sure it’s being fairly applied. We need a  watchdog that watches congress.”

Snowden encouraged individuals to use TOR for their online communications “TOR, is a mixed routing network. Which is very important because it’s encrypted from the user, through the ISP,  to the end of a sort of cloud – a network of browsers that you go through. And because of this, you’re asking your telecommunications provider to no longer spy on you by default, the way they do now, today, when you go to any website.”

He encouraged the use of encrypted hardware and software in order to avoid getting caught up in widespread ‘hoovering’ up of data.

There’s no doubt that Snowden was talking to a largely sympathetic crowd at SXSW and therefore had it largely easy in terms of the questions he was asked, but it was nevertheless an interesting and engaging session and a real highlight of this year’s conference.

(Nick Summers contributed to this report.)

└ Tags: news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one-column Timeline design to match user profiles

Mar10
by Sindy Cator on March 10, 2014 at 5:19 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Social Media

144147602 1 520x245 Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one column Timeline design to match user profiles

Facebook today announced a new streamlined look for Pages on desktop that is meant to help both users and Page admins find what they’re looking for. The new design will start rolling out “this week.”

The biggest change is the Timeline for Pages design: all posts are now in one column, just like on user profiles. As a result, posts will appear the same on your Page as they do in the News Feed (stacked on top of one another, as opposed to staggered from left to right).

Here’s the design that most Facebook users currently see:

facebook business old Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one column Timeline design to match user profiles

Here’s the new design that Facebook will be moving everyone over to:

851548 692609370790074 1098793078 n Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one column Timeline design to match user profiles

851580 745031438849658 449169299 n Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one column Timeline design to match user profiles

You’ll notice that the left-side column includes all the information about the Page, including a map, possible hours of business, phone number, website URL, as well as photos and videos. This is further confirmation by Facebook that the previous multiple-column design was simply too confusing; the company has decided to put all posts on the right side and all other information on the left.

In fact, Facebook only started to switch user profiles to the one-column design in March 2013, and finished doing so last May. Now Pages are following suit, finally ridding the social network of the format that forced users to scan two columns back and forth while scrolling.

That’s on the user side. Page admins will be happy to know they can now view information about the ads they’re running, new likes, unread notifications, and messages no matter where they are on the Page.

851549 831345306891384 241102806 n Facebook revamps Pages on the desktop with new one column Timeline design to match user profiles

Facebook has also added new navigation options at the top for accessing Page activity, insights, and settings. The new Build Audience menu takes admins to their Ads Manager account.

Lastly, Facebook is also adding a new “Pages to Watch” feature in the Page Insights tool. It lets admins track and compare the performance of Pages similar to their own, including key stats and the past week’s most engaging posts.

All in all, this is a massive update to Facebook Pages, and one that we can’t wait to appear on our own.

Top Image Credit: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images

└ Tags: facebook, syndicated
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