官术网_书友最值得收藏!

Work deserves a :-), but avoid overdoing it(687 words)

By Azeem Azhar


Emoji are everywhere. From gurning faces to the occasional grinning poo, these modern ideographs have wormed their way into our lives. You can find them on smartphones, text messages, in social networks and on T-shirts. Last month, a French man was handed a six months sentence for threatening his ex-girlfriend by sending her a gun emoji.

We should prepare ourselves for a tidal wave of winking characters. But are they ever acceptable in the workplace? Research suggests they are … in the right circumstances.

Emoji and their precursors have served a useful role in communication for nearly 35 years. Their Neanderthal forebear, the emoticon, emerged on the early text-based internet as a way of presenting some nuance and inflection to emails and chats. The first emoticon, a clumsy combination of punctuation, was the now-ubiquitous smiley :-). Its purpose was to indicate levity.

By the very end of the 1990s, iMode, a mobile internet service, was booming in popularity in Japan. Unlike the mobile internet in other countries, iMode had rich graphical interfaces that provided catalysts for experimentation. And so technicoloured emojis were born, brought to the world by designer, Shigetaka Kurita.

Scroll forward to 2011 and the use of these pictograms proliferated as Apple began to ship iPhones with an emoji keyboards. Instagram, the social network focused on images, saw the number of messages containing emoji jump from less than 5 per cent to more than 40 per cent three years later.

Sure, Instagram is frequented by youth. But data show emojis have escaped millennial limbo and entered the mainstream. A survey of US adults late last year by Emogi, an ad agency, found that 92 per cent of them regularly used emoji. A later poll by Adobe, a software company, found that our age did not not affect our attitude to emoji in the workplace. Cardigan-wearing crumblies were as likely to approve of emoji use as fresh-faced graduates.

What mattered was who you were talking to. The more senior your recipient, the more buttoned-down you needed to be. A pity, our bosses might be missing out.

The question remains, is using emojis at work just one step too far? True, language is always evolving, but there are some words we still don't use at work. Should that apply to emojis too?

We can agree they don't have a precise semantic value. Take the dollar bill with wings. Does this mean profits flying high? Or that money is flitting away? All our training around precision and clarity in communication seems in stark contrast to these ambiguous icons. Yet many emoji remain useful. My sense is that it is their fuzzy-edged sentiment that gives them their value. In themselves they may not be much but, they add nuance to sentences.

In The Communicative Functions of Emoticons in Workplace E-Mails, an academic paper recently published in the Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, researcher Karianne Skovholt and her co-authors, argue that emojis are used to intimate texture to workplace communication. One particularly important use is as a modifier to hedge messages. In expressive phrases, such as greetings, emojis strengthen the message. In more demanding dispatches, such as requests, they are used to soften the tone. In other words, they play similar roles to body language.

More prosaically, emoji also bring humour and emotion to the office. A quick emoji can signal a sense of triumph or tiredness, victory or delight, the things that make us human.

But it is best not to use them willy-nilly. Researchers at the University of Minnesota have found that different phones and computers render emojis differently — enough to change their meaning. A grinning, smiley face (“well done on the sales figures! ”) sent using Microsoft software can render as a grimace on your subordinate's iPhone (“the sales figures look terrible”). Hilarity might not ensue. Best also to avoid their use when firing someone, writing a legal document or in your annual Chairman's letter — for such messages they are still not yet universal or precise enough.

And there are some emojis that one should ignore completely because a recipient will never interpret them well. The top contender?Probably the gun.

請根據(jù)你所讀到的文章內(nèi)容,完成以下自測題目:


1.What had the French man done to his ex-girlfriend before got arrested?

A.sent a gun emoji

B.sent the T-shirts with a gun

C.shot his ex-girlfriend

D.destroyed smartphones

答案答案:A.sent a gun emoji   解釋:法國男子在與前女友實(shí)時通訊時,加入“手槍”的表情符號(emoji),被前女友告上法庭, 被判6個月監(jiān)禁。


2.Where were emojis born?

A.France

B.Japan

C.USA

D.Neanderthal

答案答案:B.Japan   解釋:emoji1999年由一個名叫Shigetaka Kurita(栗田穣崇)的日本人發(fā)明的。


3.Who added an emoji keyboards in 2011?

A.Instagram

B.Facebook

C.Adobe

D.Apple

答案答案:D.Apple   解釋:2011年蘋果公司在iPhone上添加了emoji表情鍵盤。


4.What should we do when use emojis in workplace messages?

A.use them willy-nilly

B.a(chǎn)s a modifier to hedge messages

C.use them to fire people

D.ues the gun emoji

答案答案:B.as a modifier to hedge messages   解釋:在工作環(huán)境中使用表情可以拉近距離、直觀地傳遞情緒,但是也要注意使用方法和避免使用的情景。

主站蜘蛛池模板: 海丰县| 增城市| 措美县| 乌兰浩特市| 韶关市| 阿克苏市| 铅山县| 陇川县| 阜康市| 射阳县| 合川市| 泰来县| 垦利县| 岚皋县| 保德县| 桓台县| 绩溪县| 尉氏县| 临高县| 瑞丽市| 姚安县| 宜君县| 镇康县| 金坛市| 民乐县| 白河县| 江安县| 宜春市| 湖州市| 皋兰县| 伊川县| 政和县| 新巴尔虎左旗| 东乌珠穆沁旗| 南平市| 宝鸡市| 二连浩特市| 祥云县| 涪陵区| 稷山县| 襄樊市|