http://arxiv.org/abs/1203.6360

You had me at hello: How phrasing affects memorability
Cristian 
Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil<http://arxiv.org/find/cs/1/au:+Danescu_Niculescu_Mizil_C/0/1/0/all/0/1>
, Justin Cheng <http://arxiv.org/find/cs/1/au:+Cheng_J/0/1/0/all/0/1>, Jon
Kleinberg <http://arxiv.org/find/cs/1/au:+Kleinberg_J/0/1/0/all/0/1>, Lillian
Lee <http://arxiv.org/find/cs/1/au:+Lee_L/0/1/0/all/0/1>
(Submitted on 28 Mar 2012)

Understanding the ways in which information achieves widespread public
awareness is a research question of significant interest. We consider
whether, and how, the way in which the information is phrased --- the
choice of words and sentence structure --- can affect this process. To this
end, we develop an analysis framework and build a corpus of movie quotes,
annotated with memorability information, in which we are able to control
for both the speaker and the setting of the quotes. We find significant
differences between memorable and non-memorable quotes in several key
dimensions. One is lexical distinctiveness: in aggregate, memorable quotes
use less common word choices, but at the same time are built upon a
scaffolding of common syntactic patterns; another is that memorable quotes
tend to be more general in ways that make them easy to apply in new
contexts. We also show how the concept of "memorable language" can be
extended across domains.


-- 
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Sudhakar Chandra                                    Slacker Without Borders

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