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Implicit pragmatic phenomena in headlines of Hungarian health-related fake news

Németh T., Enikő and Németh, Zsuzsanna and Nagy C., Katalin (2025) Implicit pragmatic phenomena in headlines of Hungarian health-related fake news. LINGUISTICS VANGUARD, 11. pp. 1-8. ISSN 2199-174X

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Abstract

Fake news is often designed with clickbait headlines to reach a wide readership. The current work focuses on implicit pragmatic phenomena in fake news headlines, namely implicit arguments, implicit contents in speech acts, and implicatures, in order to add to the findings of earlier research on the topic. It provides a corpus-based analysis of Hungarian health-related fake news headlines. It concludes that (i) implicit arguments in headlines create an information gap and are only used as tools of manipulation to generate clicks; (ii) the intended perlocutionary effect of the headlines that appear as speech acts with incomplete propositional content or implicit illocutionary force is not the effective transfer of information but rather to evoke emotions manipulatively; (iii) the goal of the unfair use of implicatures may be to avoid responsibility. This study reveals that the special combination of explicit and implicit content in fake news headlines can create or widen an information gap, manipulate readers by generating psychological effects, convey false information, and stimulate peripheral processing.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: : clickbait headlines; fake news; Hungarian; implicitness kattintásvadász címek; álhírek; magyar; implicitség
Subjects: P Language and Literature / nyelvészet és irodalom > P0 Philology. Linguistics / filológia, nyelvészet
SWORD Depositor: MTMT SWORD
Depositing User: MTMT SWORD
Date Deposited: 07 Feb 2025 12:04
Last Modified: 07 Feb 2025 12:04
URI: https://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/215352

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