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A smile says it all: Intergenerational differences in the interpretation of smiley emoji in response to sarcasm

Jing Cui, Yu R. Dandan, Yong Cui, Youping Jing

Acta Psychologica | Jun 15, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

This study investigated intergenerational differences in the interpretation of smiley emoji in response to literal and sarcastic statements. Younger (aged 18-30) and older (over 60) adults evaluated each emoji in terms of perceived attitude, friendliness, politeness, and appropriateness across contexts. Significant intergenerational differences emerged for smiley emoji with complex cues, but not for simple ones. Specifically, older adults tended to favor literal interpretations, viewing the smile emoji as genuine and more pleasant and the trick as fake and less pleasant. In contrast, younger adults, more attuned to innovative and conventionalized uses shaped by youth subcultures, displayed the opposite pattern. These findings suggest that older adults' positivity effect in emoji recognition may depend on emoji complexity. Context also influenced emoji interpretation. Across both groups, positive or superficially positive emoji were often judged as appropriate responses to sarcastic statements, serving to downplay negative emotions and manage face in line with emotional display rules in digital communication. Overall, this study highlights that youth subcultures shape the pragmatic functions and interpretations of smiley emoji, with intergenerational variation further moderated by emoji complexity and contextual factors.

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Authors

Researchers on this paper

Jing Cui

first | Southeast University | ORCID 0000-0003-1275-6211

Yu R. Dandan

middle | Peking University | ORCID 0000-0002-7208-8385

Yong Cui

middle | China Mobile (China) | ORCID 0009-0004-3999-2171

Youping Jing

last | Fuzhou University | ORCID 0000-0002-0699-7361

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Citation

BibTeX

@article{Cui2026smile,
  title = {A smile says it all: Intergenerational differences in the interpretation of smiley emoji in response to sarcasm},
  author = {Jing Cui and Yu R. Dandan and Yong Cui and Youping Jing},
  journal = {Acta Psychologica},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1016/j.actpsy.2026.107245},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.actpsy.2026.107245}
}

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