Posts in Press
Why emojis are here to stay as an essential part of our language

Despite its obvious influence on how we communicate, the vast emoji set is not considered a language in itself. Tyler Schnoebelen, who probably knows more about emojis than anyone else in the world, is a computer linguist who wrote his PhD thesis at Stanford University on the use of emoticons and emojis. He told Time magazine that there are rules and patterns on how we use emojis, but there is no grammar or language structure to form a sentence with them.

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PressTyler Schnoebelen
Emojis and the future of language

Digital technologies are changing the way we communicate as well as the way we write and spell. And with emojis we don’t have to do either. You can say things using pictures like our caveman ancestors. The use of emojis crosses generations. Are we dumbing down society or creating a new, creative visual language? 

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Why White People Don’t Use White Emoji

This might be the case because most default emoji, although they appear yellow, are actually white. Tyler Schnoebelen, a linguistics Ph.D. and consultant in San Francisco who has studied emoticons, notes that many of the default symbols are phenotypically white: The  symbol has blonde hair on Apple devices, etc. “It’s not surprising to me that people are not opting to go lighter, even if that’s closer to what their skin tone is, because they’re kind of represented by the default anyway,” he said.

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The Emoji Is the Birth of a New Type of Language (👈 No Joke)

TYLER SCHNOEBELEN HAS discovered something curious about why people use the skull emoji. Schnoebelen is a linguist and the chief analyst for Idibon, a firm that interprets linguistic data. So recently he got interested in emoji. He analyzed a million social media posts containing those familiar little pictograms and found that when people talk about their phones they’re 11 times more likely to use the skull.

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Here Are Rules of Using Emoji You Didn’t Know You Were Following

There may not be anyone who knows more about emoticons than Tyler Schnoebelen, a man who literally wrote his Stanford doctorate thesis on the subject. He found, for instance, that older people tend to use emoticons with noses, such as [:-)], while younger people are more likely to drop the proboscis. He discovered that roughly 10% of all tweets contain an emoticon. And he observed that the phrase f*** you rarely appears with an emoticon, because those playful little symbols can trivialize feelings like totally hating someone’s guts.

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