Johnson was subjected to prolonged vocal abuse as England won the third Ashes Test by eight wickets inside three days at Birmingham's Edgbaston ground to take a 2-1 lead in the five-match series.
While it may not have been quite as vicious as during England's 2009 series win, when Johnson had to cope with chants about his family as well as a derogatory song which mocks him for bowling left and right, it was certainly sustained and reached something of a crescendo on Friday's final day at Edgbaston.
But at the age of 33, the left-arm paceman regards the barracking as a "compliment" and said the way in which he had stopped his run and then bowled from beside the umpire on Friday were his way of responding to the taunts, rather than a sign that spectators had got to him.
"I get amongst it a bit more now," Johnson told travelling Australian media in Nottingham on Tuesday.
"When the whole crowd is cheering my name at the end of a game -- when they (England) have just won -- you have to take that as a compliment ... Where I did stop in my run-up was deliberate to try and have a bit of fun with the crowd."
"When you're walking with your family in the street, I think it's a bit overboard. But on the field, I think that's fair game ... I'm all for it.
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