SEMNIOTICS
Index, icon, symbol
This blob is eating dinner. This sleepy this blob loves you, but how do we know that this is a job for semiotics? The field of study that explores how humans and other organisms derive meaning from the world around them is semiotics. A sign is anything that represents or indicates something else is called the object. A sign isn’t necessarily pictorial, for example: the feel of a fruit may indicate its ripeness and the sound of buzzing may mean there is a bee around.
Charles Sanders defined three categories of signs: icon index and symbol. Based on how the sign is related to object, an icon directly resembles the object. It shares tangible qualities with the object. For example: a painting of pipe is an icon representing a pipe map of London is an icon representing London and the sound of coconuts may be an icon representing the sound of horse’s hooves. In a film, an index has implied association with the object. Sign and the object are connected in a logical way, for example a growling stomach indicates hunger. Sunglasses and a white cane indicate blindness and the smell of smoke indicates a nearby fire.
Symbol is not inherently connected to the object, instead the connection is a matter of convention within a particular society because their meanings must be explicitly taught. Symbols are easily misunderstood. Examples of symbols include the dotted lines on a road symbolizing that drivers may pass one another and the star of David symbolizing Judaism. Most words are also symbols as they have no natural connection with the objects. They represent professionals in any field that involves interaction and communication can benefit from understanding semiotics. For example: user interface designers are charged with making websites, programs and applications, easy to navigate and they often utilize icons indices and symbols to achieve that goal.
In order to create an effective interface, designers may run side-by-side tests to determine which signs are best associated with the intended object. Public’s interpretation of science changes very quickly in the realm of technology, as evidenced by the highly debated use of the hamburger button to represent a menu. Through widespread use of the button and careful design choices surrounding it, the hamburger button is now correctly interpreted by most users and has quickly become an industry standard.
Similarly, signs may become less attached to their meaning over time such as the image of a floppy disk. Representing this as a function formerly, an index, as users associated a physical floppy disk with storing information. This button has become a symbol as new users learn it’s function without ever having experience with a floppy disk. Animators and illustrators also need semiotic stew and understand how their work will be interpreted by audiences while some depictions of emotions are based on natural and universal facial expressions. Others are symbolic and only makes sense to certain audiences. This became clear when emoji originally developed for a Japanese phone messaging service were introduced to the west. This new audience used their own experiences with western comics and cartoons to interpret emoji often in ways the original designers had not intended. For example: in western animation an angry character may blow steam from their nose or ears so western audiences, interpret this emoji as angry while the original intention was to depict a person exhaling in triumph after accomplishing a goal.
Understanding how different cultures view certain symbols is of utmost importance in today’s world of global media. These examples may imply that semiotic focuses only on human interactions with the man-made world, but in fact biologists use semiotic stew to understand how all life-forms interact with and interpret their environment and the ability to express and interpret science. However, rudimentary is one of the fundamental qualities that distinguishes living organisms from non- living objects. Furthermore, the ability to interpret abstract symbolic signs seems to be unique to human beings and may help distinguish humans from non-human animals. Whether you’re a fish looking for food or a student looking for the library, interpreting signs is an essential part of everyday life. Knowing more about how we make meaning from the world around us will help to be better communicators and creators.