@article{jbp:/content/journals/10.1075/rcl.00002.gio, author = "Giora, Rachel and Jaffe, Inbal and Becker, Israela and Fein, Ofer", title = "Strongly attenuating highly positive concepts: The case of default sarcastic interpretations", journal= "Review of Cognitive Linguistics. Published under the auspices of the Spanish Cognitive Linguistics Association", year = "2018", volume = "16", number = "1", pages = "19-47", doi = "https://doi.org/10.1075/rcl.00002.gio", url = "https://www.jbe-platform.com/content/journals/10.1075/rcl.00002.gio", publisher = "John Benjamins", issn = "1877-9751", type = "Journal Article", keywords = "default interpretation", keywords = "pleasure", keywords = "sarcasm", keywords = "attenuation", abstract = "What are the constraints rendering stimuli, such as Alert he is not; He is not the most organized person around; Hospitality is not his best attribute; Do you really believe you are sophisticated? sarcastic by default? Recent findings ( Filik, Howman, Ralph-Nearman, & Giora, in press ; Giora et al., 2005 , 2013 , 2015a , 2015b , in progress a ) suggest that strongly attenuating a highly positive concept, e.g., alert, sophisticated, most organized, best attribute (associated here with hospitality), induces sarcastic interpretations by default. To be interpreted sarcastically by default, items should be construable as such in the absence of factors inviting sarcasm. 1 They should, thus, be (i) novel, noncoded in the mental lexicon, (ii) potentially ambiguous between literal and nonliteral interpretations, so that a preference is allowed, and (iii) free of specific and biasing contextual information. Online and offline studies, collecting self-paced reading times, eye-tracking data during reading, sarcasm rating, and pleasure ratings, alongside corpus-based studies, further support this view. 2 ", }