Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
van Mulken, Margot
Burgers, Christian
and
van der Plas, Bram
2010.
Wolves, Confederates, and the Happy Few: The Influence of Comprehension, Agreement, and Group Membership on the Attitude Toward Irony.
Discourse Processes,
Vol. 48,
Issue. 1,
p.
50.
Nilsen, Elizabeth S.
Glenwright, Melanie
and
Huyder, Vanessa
2011.
Children and Adults Understand That Verbal Irony Interpretation Depends on Listener Knowledge.
Journal of Cognition and Development,
Vol. 12,
Issue. 3,
p.
374.
Glenwright, Melanie
and
Agbayewa, Abiola S.
2012.
Older children and adolescents with high-functioning autism spectrum disorders can comprehend verbal irony in computer-mediated communication.
Research in Autism Spectrum Disorders,
Vol. 6,
Issue. 2,
p.
628.
Choe, Katherine S.
Keil, Frank C.
and
Bloom, Paul
2012.
Developing Intuitions about How Personal and Social Properties Are Linked to the Brain and the Body.
Infant and Child Development,
Vol. 21,
Issue. 4,
p.
430.
BOSCO, FRANCESCA M.
ANGELERI, ROMINA
COLLE, LIVIA
SACCO, KATIUSCIA
and
BARA, BRUNO G.
2013.
Communicative abilities in children: An assessment through different phenomena and expressive means.
Journal of Child Language,
Vol. 40,
Issue. 4,
p.
741.
Boylan, James
and
Katz, Albert N.
2013.
Ironic Expression Can Simultaneously Enhance and Dilute Perception of Criticism.
Discourse Processes,
Vol. 50,
Issue. 3,
p.
187.
Picard, Delphine
and
Blanc, Nathalie
2013.
Need for Humor Scale: Validation with French Children.
Psychological Reports,
Vol. 112,
Issue. 2,
p.
502.
Godbee, Kali
and
Porter, Melanie
2013.
Comprehension of sarcasm, metaphor and simile in Williams syndrome.
International Journal of Language & Communication Disorders,
Vol. 48,
Issue. 6,
p.
651.
Filippova, Eva
2014.
Developing appreciation of irony in Canadian and Czech discourse.
Journal of Pragmatics,
Vol. 74,
Issue. ,
p.
209.
GLENWRIGHT, MELANIE
PARACKEL, JAYANTHI M.
CHEUNG, KRISTENE R. J.
and
NILSEN, ELIZABETH S.
2014.
Intonation influences how children and adults interpret sarcasm.
Journal of Child Language,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 2,
p.
472.
Filippova, Eva
2014.
Pragmatic Development in First Language Acquisition.
Vol. 10,
Issue. ,
p.
261.
2014.
Cognitive Modeling.
Vol. 45,
Issue. ,
Whyte, Elisabeth M.
and
Nelson, Keith E.
2015.
Trajectories of pragmatic and nonliteral language development in children with autism spectrum disorders.
Journal of Communication Disorders,
Vol. 54,
Issue. ,
p.
2.
Cohn, Melanie
St-Laurent, Marie
Barnett, Alexander
and
McAndrews, Mary Pat
2015.
Social inference deficits in temporal lobe epilepsy and lobectomy: risk factors and neural substrates.
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience,
Vol. 10,
Issue. 5,
p.
636.
2016.
Mock Politeness in English and Italian.
Vol. 267,
Issue. ,
Hoicka, Elena
2016.
Metapragmatics of Humor.
Vol. 14,
Issue. ,
p.
257.
Loukusa, Soile
Mäkinen, Leena
Gabbatore, Ilaria
Laukkanen-Nevala, Päivi
and
Leinonen, Eeva
2017.
Understanding Contextual and Social Meaning in Typically Developing Finnish-Speaking Four- To Eight-Year-Old Children.
Psychology of Language and Communication,
Vol. 21,
Issue. 1,
p.
408.
Dynel, Marta
2017.
Academics vs. American scriptwriters vs. academics: A battle over the etic and emic “sarcasm” and “irony” labels.
Language & Communication,
Vol. 55,
Issue. ,
p.
69.
Colston, Herbert L.
2017.
Irony in language use and communication.
Vol. 1,
Issue. ,
p.
19.
Willison, Robert
2017.
Irony in language use and communication.
Vol. 1,
Issue. ,
p.
61.