Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19

Since the beginning of 2022, the Hong Kong government has imposed strict social distancing measures and changed its stance on various regional policies with the aim to contain the so-called ‘fifth wave’ of COVID-19. In these pandemic and ‘infodemic’ times filled with uncertainty and fear, Hong Kong...

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Main Authors: Carol Yu, Dennis Tay, Ying Jin, Xinhua Yuan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1207302/full
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author Carol Yu
Dennis Tay
Ying Jin
Xinhua Yuan
author_facet Carol Yu
Dennis Tay
Ying Jin
Xinhua Yuan
author_sort Carol Yu
collection DOAJ
description Since the beginning of 2022, the Hong Kong government has imposed strict social distancing measures and changed its stance on various regional policies with the aim to contain the so-called ‘fifth wave’ of COVID-19. In these pandemic and ‘infodemic’ times filled with uncertainty and fear, Hong Kong netizens used local online discussion forums as a resource to establish an innovative form of ‘helping network.’ This study is based on 230 posts from a popular local online discussion forum ‘LIHKG’ in February 2022 when the pandemic was regarded as most critical by the Department of Health. Speech Acts theoretic approach was adopted to explore how forum users employed speech acts to perform various communicative practices such as expressing concerns, asking for information, and engaging with others in a CMC environment amid a global health crisis. Representatives were found to be the most dominant text-based speech acts, followed by directives, expressives and commissives. Speech acts provide forum users a context in which emoji usage occurs. Forum users not only make use of words to ‘do’ things in the online self-help forum, but they also employ emojis to either supplement or complement speech acts. This study also shows that emojis perform multiple functions in the discussion posts and argues that they do not merely function as emotion indicators of their textual company, but also carry significant pragmatic meanings by illustrating how they can also carry illocutionary force and in some cases, even alter the illocutionary force of their preceding texts. The findings of this study enhance our understanding of how forum users communicate via verbal and nonverbal means within the underexplored ‘helping domain’ of online discussion forums. It also suggests that online discussion forum interactions need to be approached differently than other better understood alternatives.
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spelling doaj.art-1ed4f3a1680046da9967fbc159a075032023-07-11T04:36:41ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782023-07-011410.3389/fpsyg.2023.12073021207302Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19Carol YuDennis TayYing JinXinhua YuanSince the beginning of 2022, the Hong Kong government has imposed strict social distancing measures and changed its stance on various regional policies with the aim to contain the so-called ‘fifth wave’ of COVID-19. In these pandemic and ‘infodemic’ times filled with uncertainty and fear, Hong Kong netizens used local online discussion forums as a resource to establish an innovative form of ‘helping network.’ This study is based on 230 posts from a popular local online discussion forum ‘LIHKG’ in February 2022 when the pandemic was regarded as most critical by the Department of Health. Speech Acts theoretic approach was adopted to explore how forum users employed speech acts to perform various communicative practices such as expressing concerns, asking for information, and engaging with others in a CMC environment amid a global health crisis. Representatives were found to be the most dominant text-based speech acts, followed by directives, expressives and commissives. Speech acts provide forum users a context in which emoji usage occurs. Forum users not only make use of words to ‘do’ things in the online self-help forum, but they also employ emojis to either supplement or complement speech acts. This study also shows that emojis perform multiple functions in the discussion posts and argues that they do not merely function as emotion indicators of their textual company, but also carry significant pragmatic meanings by illustrating how they can also carry illocutionary force and in some cases, even alter the illocutionary force of their preceding texts. The findings of this study enhance our understanding of how forum users communicate via verbal and nonverbal means within the underexplored ‘helping domain’ of online discussion forums. It also suggests that online discussion forum interactions need to be approached differently than other better understood alternatives.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1207302/fullspeech actsemojiscomputer-mediated communicationonline discussion forumself-helpCOVID-19
spellingShingle Carol Yu
Dennis Tay
Ying Jin
Xinhua Yuan
Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
Frontiers in Psychology
speech acts
emojis
computer-mediated communication
online discussion forum
self-help
COVID-19
title Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
title_full Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
title_fullStr Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
title_short Speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in LIHKG online discussion forum amid COVID-19
title_sort speech acts and the communicative functions of emojis in lihkg online discussion forum amid covid 19
topic speech acts
emojis
computer-mediated communication
online discussion forum
self-help
COVID-19
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1207302/full
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