July 14, 2022, 9.00 AM PDT - 4.00 PM PDT, Online/In-Person Meeting (Room 506 - Samish)

Emoji

5th International Workshop on Emoji Understanding and Applications in Social Media
Co-located with The 2022 Annual Conference of the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL-HLT 2022)
Room 506 - Samish, Hyatt Regency Seattle, Seattle, WA, USA

OVERVIEW

Pictographs, commonly referred to as "emoji", have become a popular way to enhance electronic communication. With their introduction in the late 1990's, emoji have been widely used to enhance the sentiment, emotion, and sarcasm expressed in social media messages. They often play distinct social and communicative roles compared to other forms of written language while taking over language constructs such as slang terms and emoticons. The ability to automatically process, derive meaning and interpret text fused with emoji will be essential as society embraces emoji as a standard form of online communication. Yet the pictorial nature of emoji, the fact that (the same) emoji may be used in different contexts to express different meanings, and that emoji are used in different cultures and communities over the world who interpret emoji differently, make it especially difficult to apply traditional Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques to analyze them. To meet these challenges, Emoji aims to stimulate research on understanding social, cultural, communicative, and linguistic roles of emoji and developing novel computational approaches to analyze, interpret and understand emoji and their usage in social media applications. It will provide a forum to bring together researchers and practitioners from both academia and industry in the areas of computer science, natural language processing, computational linguistics, human-computer interaction, and computational social sciences to discuss high-quality research and emerging applications, to exchange ideas and experience, and to identify new opportunities for collaboration.

Emoji is the 5th of a series of emoji understanding workshops conducted by the organizers. The 1st emoji understanding workshop, Emoji, was the best-attended workshop at ICWSM 2018 (with 35 attendees) that was extended from a half-day to a full-day due to the quality and quantity of submissions received and the expressed interest. It attracted 18 submissions, including 14 long papers and 4 short papers. A total of 8 papers (6 long papers and 2 short papers) were accepted for the final workshop program and it also included a keynote presentation, a tutorial, and a highly interdisciplinary panel on "The Challenges in Emoji Understanding" that provided an animated and engaging forum to the attendees to discuss the open emoji research problems with leading researchers and practitioners. The workshop program was covered in a WIRED.com article which can be accessed online at https://www.wired.com/story/academic-emoji-conference/. The second emoji understanding workshop, Emoji, was co-located with The Web Conference 2019 (formerly, The World Wide Web Conference). It attracted 11 submissions, including 7 full papers and 4 short papers, out of which, 6 papers were accepted for presentation. The workshop program also consisted of a keynote presentation and three invited talks. The workshop ran for a half-day and attracted more than 40 participants. The third emoji understanding workshop, Emoji, was co-located with ICWSM 2020. It attracted 63 registered participants where Emojination and Adobe Inc. sponsored twenty of them with their workshop registration fees. The workshop program consisted of a keynote speech, an invited talk, and five research paper presentations. To minimize the effect of not having an opportunity to network in-person due to the online nature of this workshop, an hour long virtual networking event was conducted at the end of the workshop which attracted lively participation. The fourth emoji understanding workshop, Emoji, was co-located with ICWSM 2021. The workshop attracted more than 150 attendees and it was the most attended workshop at the ICWSM 2021. Emojination and Adobe Inc. sponsored fifty of the workshop attendees with their workshop registration fees. The workshop program consited of two keynotes, three invited talks, a panel discussion on Pictographic Languages, and a total of 8 paper presentations. The attendees of the workshop were also invited to a private (online) screening of The Emoji Story, a documentry on emoji which was co-produced by Jennifer 8. Lee, who is also a co-organizer of our workshop series.

IMPORTANT DATES

Paper Submission: April 8th, 2022. [SUBMIT YOUR PAPER HERE]
Author Notification: May 6th, 2022.
Camera-ready Deadline: May 20th, 2022.
Workshop Day: July 14 or July 15, 2022.


NEWS

03-01-2021: Emoji Paper submission website is ready. [SUBMIT YOUR PAPER HERE].
12-09-2021: Emoji Workshop Website is online .
11-21-2021: Emoji workshop was accepted at NAACL-HLT 2022 .

CALL FOR PAPERS

With the rise of social media, emoji have become an extremely popular form of communication in social media. They are equally popular across major social media sites including Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. In 2018, Facebook reported that over 700 million messages with emoji are shared on their platform every day while over 900 million emoji are sent in Facebook Messenger without any text content every day. In the same year, Twitter reported that it processed 250 million emoji per month. In 2015, Instagram reported that nearly half of the photo comments posted on Instagram contain emoji and Instagram users tend to replace slang terms using emoji in photo comments. Another study revealed that emoji are slowly taking over emoticons on Twitter. Emoji data generated on social media sites have been utilized to study how emoji are used across different languages, cultures, user communities and as features to learn machine learning models to solve problems that span across many applications, including sentiment analysis, emotion analysis, and sarcasm detection. The ability to automatically process, derive meaning, and interpret text fused with emoji will be essential as society embraces emoji as a standard form of online communication. Thus, Emoji tries to bring together computer science, natural language processing, computational linguistics, human-computer interaction, and computational social sciences researchers and practitioners from both academia and industry to discuss and exchange ideas on understanding social, cultural, communicative, and linguistic roles of emoji while leading the discussions on building novel computational methods to understand and interpret them.

Emoji is focused on research and discussions on challenges in emoji understanding, including but not limited to the following research directions.

  1. Challenges in interpreting the meaning of an emoji in a message context
  2. Emoji-based retrieval and search
  3. Challenges in using emoji as a language
  4. Novel methods for emoji sense disambiguation
  5. Novel methods for calculating emoji similarity
  6. Novel methods for emoji prediction
  7. Emoji's effects on the evolution of language constructs used on social media such as emoticons and slang terms
  8. Emoji's effects on language evolution
  9. Common emoji usages in social media
  10. Cultural and community-specific emoji meaning evolution and interpretation
  11. Distinct social and communicative roles of emoji
  12. Understanding sender intention and receiver interpretation of emoji
  13. Emoji rendering and interface design challenges
  14. Applications of emoji in social media
  15. Emoji and the Law
  16. Emoji, Gender and Identity
  17. Research related to other pictorial representations such as emoticons, stickers, kaomoji, emotes, customized emoji (e.g., bitmoji), and animated gifs

We encourage submissions (full research papers and short papers) that utilize quantitative, qualitative, and mixed research methods to approach the above challenges as contributions. For more information on how to prepare and submit papers including LaTeX templates, conference management website etc., please check the paper submission instructions below.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

We invite regular technical papers (8 pages) and short papers (4 pages). Submissions must be original and should not have been published previously or be under consideration for publication while being evaluated for this workshop. Submissions will be evaluated by the program committee based on the quality of the work and its fit to the workshop themes. All submissions should be double-blind and follow the ACL Author Guidelines. The official ACL style templates are available as an Overleaf template and can also be downloaded in Latex or Word formats. A high-resolution PDF of the paper should be uploaded to the conference management system here - https://www.softconf.com/naacl2022/Emoji2022/ before the paper submission deadline. More (general) information on paper submission guidelines can be found here.

IMPORTANT DATES

Paper Submission: April 8th, 2022. [SUBMIT YOUR PAPER HERE]
Author Notification: May 6th, 2022.
Camera-ready Deadline: May 20th, 2022.
Workshop Day: July 14 or July 15, 2022.



ORGANIZATION

Organizing Committee

Program Committee

Website and Content Management

WORKSHOP PROGRAM


The final workshop program including all accepted papers is listed below. Please note that all times are in PDT (Pacific Daylight Time (GMT-7)).

Time (PDT)

Description

9.00 AM - 9.10 AM

Welcome and Opening Remarks

9.10 AM - 10.10 AM

Keynote - The Next 5000 Years of Emoji Research
Speaker - Alexander Robertson (Researcher, Google)


Alexander Robertson
Researcher
Google

On the occasion of the 5th Emoji Workshop, we should acknowledge that emoji research is no longer in its infancy. Headed towards its gangly teens, what will our field look like in the future? I'll critically examine popular methodological approaches to emoji research over the past decade or so, and ask you to think about where our strengths lie and where opportunities are. Drawing on my own [multi|inter]disciplinary experiences to talk about what I think we can learn about emoji through these, I will invite you to contribute your own unique experiences to the discussion.

10.10 AM - 10.30 AM

Interpreting Emoji with Emoji: 🏖️ => ☀️😎🌊
Jens Helge Reelfs, Timon Mohaupt, Sandipan Sikdar, Markus Strohmaier, and Oliver Hohlfeld
[Download Paper] | [Video]

10.30 AM - 11.00 AM

Coffee Break

11.00 AM - 11.20 AM

Understanding the Sarcastic Nature of Emojis with SarcOji
Vandita Grover and Hema Banati
[Download Paper] | [Video]

11.20 AM - 11.40 AM

Investigating the Influence of User's Personality on the Ambiguous Emoji Perception
Olga Iarygina
[Download Paper]

11.40 AM - 12.00 PM

Beyond Emojis: An Insight into the IKON Language
Laura Meloni, Phimolporn Hitmeangsong, Bernhard Appelhaus, Edgar Walthert and Cesco Reale
[Download Paper] | [Video]

12.00 PM - 12.20 PM

Graphicon Evolution on the Chinese Social Media Platform BiliBili
Yiqiong Zhang, Susan Herring, and Suifu Gan
[Download Paper] | [Slides] | [Video]

12.20 PM - 12.35 PM

Conducting Cross-Cultural Research on COVID-19 Memes
Jing Ge-Stadnyk and Lusha Sa
[Download Paper]

12.35 PM - 2.00 PM

Lunch Break

2.00 PM - 3.00 PM

Keynote - Processing Emoji in Real Time
Speaker - Benjamin Weissman (Lecturer, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute)


Benjamin Weissman
Lecturer
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

In this talk, I will provide an overview of a variety of studies that have examined emoji uptake and processing in real time. The domain of emoji processing, though still relatively new and underexplored, can shed light on major questions of interest, such as the often-asked “are emoji language?” In pursuit of an answer to that question, results from a range of emoji processing studies will be explored alongside word and picture processing studies. In addition to synthesizing existing work, I will look to the future of emoji processing research and project how more work in this direction can continue to help us answer big questions in the field.

3.00 PM - 3.15 PM

EmojiCloud: a Tool for Emoji Cloud Visualization
Yunhe Feng, Cheng Guo, Bingbing Wen, Peng Sun, Yufei Yue and Dingwen Tao
[Download Paper] | [Slides] | [Video]

3.15 PM - 3.30 PM

Semantic Congruency Facilitates Memory for Emojis
Andriana L. Christofalos, Laurie Beth Feldman and Heather Sheridan
[Download Paper]

3.30 PM - 3.45 PM

Emoji Semantics/Pragmatics: Investigating Commitment and Lying
Benjamin Weissman
[Download Paper]

3.45 PM - 3.50 PM

Closing Remarks

WORKSHOP REGISTRATION


Emoji workshop will be held on the 14th of July 2022, from 9.00 AM PDT to 4.00 PM PDT as a hybrid event (both, online and in-person). You can register for the workshop here.

WORKSHOP VENUE


Emoji workshop will be held as a hybrid event (both, online and in-person). The in-person event will be held at Room 506 - Samish, Hyatt Regency Seattle located at 808 Howell Street, Seattle, WA 98101, USA. More information about the venue, surrounding attractions, and accomodation can be found here.

PREVIOUS WORKSHOPS


Below, we provide links to proceedings of the previous runs of our emoji workshop series.

Previous Runs of the Emoji Workshop

  1. The 1st emoji workshop, titled Emoji, was held in conjunction with with The 12th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM-18). The workshop attracted more than 35 attendees representing many disciplines. The workshop program included a keynote, a tutorial, a total of 8 paper presentations (6 long papers and 2 short papers), and a panel discussion which was lead by leading researchers and practitioners. The workshop proceedings are available at http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-2130/.

  2. The 2nd emoji workshop, titled Emoji, was held in conjunction with with The Web Conference 2019 (formerly, The World Wide Web Conference). The workshop attracted more than 40 attendees representing many disciplines. The workshop program included a keynote, a total of 9 paper presentations (5 long papers and 1 short papers) including 3 invited talks from the leading researchers in the industry and academia. The workshop proceedings are available here.

  3. The 3rd emoji workshop, titled Emoji, was held online in conjunction with with The 14th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM-20). The workshop attracted more than 60 attendees representing many disciplines. The workshop program included a keynote, a total of 6 paper presentations (4 long papers and 1 short papers) including 1 invited talk and an optional networking session. The workshop proceedings are available here.

  4. The 4th emoji workshop, titled Emoji, was held online in conjunction with with The 15th International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media (ICWSM-21). The workshop attracted more than 150 attendees representing many disciplines and it was the most attended workshop at the ICWSM-21. The workshop program included two keynotes, three invited talks, a panel discussion on Pictographic Languages, and a total of 8 paper presentations (5 long papers and 3 short papers). The attendees of the workshop were also invited to a private (online) screening of The Emoji Story, a documentry on emoji which was co-produced by Jennifer 8. Lee, who is also a co-organizer of our workshop. The workshop proceedings are available here.