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Culture Determines Which Emoticon You Use

Ant writes "A LiveScience story discusses the cultural differences in interpreting facial expressions. The article notes that where you come from plays a large role in what part of the human face you use to determine another person's mood. That also includes communicating online with the usages of smiley faces. 'For instance, in Japan, people tend to look to the eyes for emotional cues, whereas Americans tend to look to the mouth, says researcher Masaki Yuki, a behavioral scientist at Hokkaido University in Japan ... In Japan, emoticons tend to emphasize the eyes, such as the happy face (^_^) and the sad face (;_;). "After seeing the difference between American and Japanese emoticons, it dawned on me that the faces looked exactly like typical American and Japanese smiles," he said.'"

21 of 251 comments (clear)

  1. No emoticons? by eln · · Score: 5, Funny

    So what culture am I a part of if I want to strangle someone every time they use any kind of emoticon at all?

    1. Re:No emoticons? by stsp · · Score: 5, Funny

      So what culture am I a part of if I want to strangle someone every time they use any kind of emoticon at all?
      Vogon.
    2. Re:No emoticons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      I guess you're just old >:->
      But what I don't understand is why do you want to strangle people who use emoticon ? O_o
      I mean... it's just a way to communicate more efficiently ! :)
      Oh, boy... I'm so dead :(

    3. Re:No emoticons? by arivanov · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Case A: you are the culture that still reads the text, can understand a joke, can understand sarcasm, can use and read cultural associations including ones not just in your (or nerd) popular culture, can... What is even worse, you expect that from the people around you. If that is the case - you are an endangered animal in a world of TXT-abuse. You need to be entered in the red book of endangered species, towards the end, near the black pages.
      Case B: you need a break. Long one to restore your sense of humour.

      According to the good slashdot tradition I am not going to RTFA, but I will pitch in my 2c anyway. The observation is correct. If you look at eastern Europeans they use the ;-) much more than English or Americans, Brits tend to use the ROFL emoticon more and so on.

      Cheers ;-)

      --
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    4. Re:No emoticons? by nevernamed · · Score: 4, Funny

      Of course it would be easy to understand why those anime cartoons have such huge eyes after reading this!

    5. Re:No emoticons? by h2g2bob · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I mean... it's just a way to communicate more efficiently
      That's right, they DO serve a purpose. Text is very easy to mis-read, especially if it contains sarcasm or jokes. Humans normally use facial expressions and tone of voice to convey this information, which isn't part of email or IM. Emoticons show this.
    6. Re:No emoticons? by mrchaotica · · Score: 5, Funny

      Text is very easy to mis-read, especially if it contains sarcasm or jokes.

      <sarcasm>This sounds like a job for XML!</sarcasm>

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  2. D'uhhhhhhhhh by Xtense · · Score: 4, Informative

    Well, ain't it obvious? It's not like the Internet is some sort of global village or something...

    Oh, wait...

    Alas, if you think you saw emoticons, just google for Shift_JIS art, especially of the 2chan kind (there's some on en.wiki, but it's mostly the copy-pasted stuff). For what I know, that BBS is, and i quote, "f*****g huge". It's more than a subculture, but less than a culture of it's own. If i recall correctly, they've even written a book and have their Shift_JIS creatures roaming some japanese TV programs.

    --
    "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams [...]."
  3. Re:That's interesting. by Mylakovich · · Score: 4, Funny

    Interesting indeed! Facinating, even! What a unique and special person you are.

  4. The most enigmatic one by wumpus188 · · Score: 5, Funny

    (.)(.)

    I am a regular ./ reader and this one always puzzled me.

    1. Re:The most enigmatic one by kumanopuusan · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Sorry, but the parent isn't insightful, it's misinformation. What the article's author is saying is that the Japanese don't make big smiles. You've actually got it backwards.

      Japanese people don't spend a lot of time looking into other people's eyes. It makes people very uncomfortable. I've even been recommended, on more than one occasion, to look at someone's chest rather than their face. During conversation, it's important to look away from the other person occasionally. The practice has the odd effect of making Japanese people in Western countries sometimes appear unattentive or uninterested. During meetings at work, I'm often the only one even looking in the direction of the person who's talking.

      So, it isn't that Japanese people stare into each other's eyes all the time. His point is that Japanese people (especially the older generation) can be not very expressive about their emotions. Since they don't make big smiles or frowns, grimacing emoticons don't make sense. What little emotion is conveyed through the face is shown in a person's eyes. A greatly exaggerated version of this forms the Japanese smiley.

      --
      Use of the words "good", "bad" or "evil" is almost invariably the result of oversimplification.
  5. non-human emoticons by kahei · · Score: 5, Insightful


    It would be instructive to consider the Internet's small but active flounder population, whose emoticons look like this: ..)

    Notice the distinctive adaptation to a 'flounder-like' way of percieving faces. Of course you may object that internet-using flounders are imaginary. As a matter of fact, that's an objection was raised even by many prominent flounders when the 'unicorn flounder' smiley was first circulated:

    -..)

    --
    Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
  6. Let :-) Reign Supreme! by eklitzke · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a young college-aged student, and I've definitely noticed a shift towards Japanese style emoticons like ^_^ from my peers. Even among those who use the "sideways" emoticons, certainly you would never see :-) -- the hyphen is considered superfluous, and a simple :) will do just fine.

    Maybe I'm asocial, but because of this I've adopted the "retro" :-) style smilies, which seems to really bug a lot of my friends.

    --
    #include ".signature"
  7. Re:/b/tards by Mikachu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Rules 1 and 2, asshat. :P

  8. The mouth lies by Colin+Smith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's easy to fake a smile. It's more difficult to fake happiness or amusement shown through the eyes. Some cultures recognise this.

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    Deleted
  9. Oh no, it's.... by Dogtanian · · Score: 4, Funny

    The goatse emoticon:

    (=O=)

    or what about

    =(3OE)=

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    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
    1. Re:Oh no, it's.... by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Funny

      The goatse emoticon:

      (=O=)

      I will never see a TIE fighter the same way again, you bastard.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  10. Re:Russian smileys )))) by Dogtanian · · Score: 5, Funny

    Finally an appropriate thread to ask this in. Could someone please explain why Russian smileys have no eyes, and typically multiple chins? Because many people in Eastern Europe really look like that... the radiation from Chernobyl had a devastating effect on the populations there.
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  11. Re:The one I hate by Daengbo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm in Korea, not Japan, and they tend to use the Korean alphabet to indicate emoticons (e.g. _ for sad). I think it's fine, but the emoticon is obviously limited in scope because of the need to type in Korean. People writing to me in English still switch into their Korean input for emoticons.

    In Thailand, they use "555" instead of "lol" (I know, not emoticons ... still related) because five in Thai is pronounced "Ha!" 555 = Ha ha ha!

  12. Cultural differences on Eroticon six by SoVeryTired · · Score: 5, Funny
    As far as I know, this one is unique to Eroticon Six...

    (.)(.)(.)

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  13. Re:Emoticon Classes by freeweed · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Um..

    Count me in the vast group of people that have been online well over a decade, are familiar with virtually all Internet terminology, and have never, EVER heard of "ROFL" being referred to as an "emoticon".

    Notice the term itself - emoticon. A portmandeau of "emotion" and "icon". The last part is a hint that there's something semi-graphical about it. Abbreviations don't exactly fit this term, in the slightest.

    In fact, use of things like ROFL and LOL pre-date the emoticon phenomenon in my experience. Heck, humanity was using abbreviations like this for years before we even had computers (KISS, FUBAR, etc). I don't think retconning them as emoticons makes any sense, and in fact you're the first person I've ever seen try to do that.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.