Embodiment and simulated interaction in online stance expression
Why is this work in the frame?
A frame that forgets how it found something cannot be audited. These are the routes that admitted this work.
The three-model screen
all 1,000 screened works →All three models called this out of scope.
Linguistic analysis of embodiment and simulated interaction in online stance expression and memes; the object is social media discourse, not research.
The article studies embodiment and stance expression in online discourse, not research itself.
Linguistic and cognitive analysis of stance and simulated interaction in online memes, not research practice.
Abstract
The expression and exchange of stance drives much social media discourse, including internet memes. We demonstrate how, even in the absence of actual face-to-face communication, online discourse and memes rely on the dynamics of embodiment and dialogue in comparable ways, while also developing specific constructional forms for this with no direct face-to-face equivalent. We introduce the notion of simulated interaction to refer to the combinations of embodied expression, images, and the structures of (apparent) quotation and dialogue allowing online communicators to vividly represent experience and signal stance.
Stored with the screening record, where it is evidence for the labels above.
The record
- Venue
- Frontiers in Psychology
- Topic
- Language, Metaphor, and Cognition
- Field
- Psychology
- Canadian institutions
- University of British Columbia
- Funders
- —
- Keywords
- Embodied cognitionExpression (computer science)Face (sociological concept)PsychologyFacial expressionThe InternetSocial mediaFace-to-faceHuman–computer interactionCognitive scienceCommunicationLinguisticsComputer scienceEpistemologyArtificial intelligenceWorld Wide Web
- Has abstract in OpenAlex
- yes