People worldwide love the ‘face with tears of joy’ emoji, except the romantic French who prefer the ‘heart’ emoji, according to a study that analysed 427 million messages from nearly four million smartphone users in 212 countries and regions.
Researchers at the University of Michigan (U-M) and Peking University analysed whether emoji use was universal or differed based on user location and culture.
They used a popular input method app — Kika Emoji Keyboard — made available in 60 languages. The team’s results are believed to be the first large scale analysis of emoji usage.
“Emojis are everywhere. They are becoming the ubiquitous language that bridges everyone across different cultures,” said Wei Ai, a doctoral student at the U-M School of Information and one of the lead authors of the study.
Ai and colleagues found that the ''face with tears of joy'' emoji is the most popular emoji, comprising 15.4 per cent of the total symbols in the study. Heart emoji and heart eyes emoji are the second and third most used ones.
According to the findings, the French love using an emoji the most, with nearly 20 per cent of messages, including at least one symbol, followed by Russians and Americans.
In line with perceptions of the culture, the romantic French embrace icons associated with hearts, while users from other countries prefer emojis related to faces.
The researchers also explored other cultural preferences in using emojis. Countries with high levels of individualism, like Australia, France and the Czech Republic, overwhelmingly use more happy emojis.
People in long-term orientation societies who tend to have values that centre on the future — French, Hungarians and Ukrainians — are less likely to use negative emojis than those living in societies with low long-term orientation like Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Israel.
Contrary to their perceptions as high-indulgent cultures, countries like Mexico, Colombia, Chile and Argentina do not use more positive emojis expressing happiness, researchers said.
The study found that they are more likely to use negative symbols, in comparison to cultures known for restraint and self-discipline, like Turkey, France and Russia.
“Our report shows that users from different countries can have various preferences to use emojis,” said Qiaozhu Mei, associate professor at the U-M School of Information.
Published - January 12, 2017 01:40 am IST