Literature DB >> 33733201

Digital Articulation: Examining Text-Based Linguistic Performances in Mobile Communication Through Keystroke-Logging Analysis.

Joel Schneier1.   

Abstract

This study examines how text-based mobile communication practices are performatively constructed as individuals compose messages key-by-key on virtual keyboards, and how these synchronous performances (Mobile interface theory: embodied space and locative media. New York, NY: Routledge) reflect the iterative process of constructing and maintaining interpersonal relationships. In doing so, this study reports on keystroke-logging analysis (see Writ. Commun. 30, 358-392) in order to observe how participants (N = 10) composed text as part of everyday mobile communication for the period of one week, subsequently producing 179,996 individual keystroke log-file records. Participants used LogKey, a virtual keyboard application made exclusively for this study to run on the Android mobile operating system. Analysis of keystroke log-file data suggest that timing processes of composing text-messages may differ as participants messaged with different categories of interlocutors, composed on different communication applications, and composed paralinguistic features-such as variants of Lol and Haha Thurlow and Brown, (Discourse Anal. Online, 2003, 1, 1); Tagg, (Discourse of text messaging. 2012, Bloomsbury, UK)-at different turn-taking positions. This evidence suggests that keystroke-logging methods may contribute to understanding of how individuals manage interpersonal relationships in real-time (Please reply! the replying norm in adolescent SMS communication," in The inside text: social, cultural and design perspectives on SMS. (Norwell, MA: Springer), 53-73); (Beyond genre: closings and relational work in texting," in Digital discourse: language in the new media. (Oxford: Oxford University Press), 67-85), and suggests future direction for methodologically studying linguistic performances as part of text-based mobile communication.
Copyright © 2021 Schneier.

Entities:  

Keywords:  computational sociolinguistics; digital articulation; keystroke analysis; mobile communication; paralinguistic cues; text messaging

Year:  2021        PMID: 33733201      PMCID: PMC7861219          DOI: 10.3389/frai.2020.539920

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Artif Intell        ISSN: 2624-8212


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Authors:  Márton Sóskuthy; Jennifer Hay
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2017-06-06

2.  Diffusion of lexical change in social media.

Authors:  Jacob Eisenstein; Brendan O'Connor; Noah A Smith; Eric P Xing
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-11-19       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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