1. Implications
1.1. We tend to think of online communication as the poor relative of human communication
1.2. But specific behaviors that occur explicitly online help us understand some behaviors better, provide more information
1.3. Emojis provide additional contextual information
1.3.1. Help us accurately interpret intentions
2. Categories of emoji behavior
2.1. Happy
2.2. Sad
2.3. Miscellaneous
3. Personality
3.1. Example
3.1.1. Openness
3.1.1.1. You enjoy new experiences
3.1.1.2. You're likely to use various miscellaneous emojis
4. Second group of participants
4.1. Observers were to look through the screenshots of profiles to make a study of impression of the first group
4.1.1. The more smiley emojis had been used, the more the observers thought they were agreeable, conscientious and open
4.1.2. Were the perceptions accurate?
4.1.2.1. We corresponded the self reports with the observers' perceptions
4.1.2.2. Turns out, extraversion and openness judgements were accurate
4.1.3. In online first impressions, we're good at detecting openness
5. Speaker
5.1. LINDA KAYE
5.1.1. Cyberpsychology Expert | UK
5.1.2. Dr Linda Kaye (@LindaKKaye) | Twitter
6. Emojis
6.1. Symbols we use in online communication
6.2. Form of emotional communication
6.2.1. help people interpret our emotional tone
6.3. But emojis reveal more about us
6.3.1. they communicate aspects of our personality
7. Emoji behavior lets us establish a person's personality
7.1. Personality is multi-dimensional
7.2. The Big 5 Model
7.2.1. Extraversion
7.2.2. Agreeableness
7.2.3. Conscientiousness
7.2.4. Neuroticism
7.2.5. Openness to Experience
7.3. Asked Facebook users to complete a personality questionnaire
7.3.1. Get trade scores
7.3.2. Compare to emoji behavior
7.3.2.1. via self report
7.3.2.2. by looking at Facebook profiles