Effects of gender and verbal aggression on perceptions of U.S. political speakers

C. Nau, Craig O. Stewart
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Two experiments tested whether male and female political speakers in the United States are judged differently when they use verbal attacks. Participants read eight short excerpts of political speeches, half of which contained character and competence attacks (the other half without such attacks), and half of which were attributed to a female speaker (the other half a male speaker), and rated these in terms of agreement with the message, and perceptions of credibility, appropriateness, and aggressiveness. In both experiments, messages containing verbally aggressive attacks resulted in less perceived credibility and appropriateness, and these negative effects were consistent regardless of the speaker’s gender. In Experiment 1, women tended to penalize aggressive speakers more so than did men, suggesting the men are less sensitive to verbal aggression in their evaluations of political speakers. However, women tended to perceive non-aggressive female speakers as more aggressive than male speakers. Most of these interaction effects were not replicated in Experiment 2.
性别和言语攻击对美国政治演说者认知的影响
两项实验测试了美国男性和女性政治演讲者在使用言语攻击时是否会受到不同的评判。参与者阅读了八篇政治演讲的简短摘录,其中一半包含性格和能力攻击(另一半没有),一半被认为是女性演讲者(另一半是男性演讲者),并根据与信息的一致程度,以及对可信度、适当性和攻击性的看法对这些演讲进行评分。在这两个实验中,包含言语攻击性攻击的信息导致可信度和适当性降低,而且这些负面影响与说话者的性别无关。在实验1中,女性比男性更倾向于惩罚攻击性演讲者,这表明男性在评估政治演讲者时对言语攻击不那么敏感。然而,女性倾向于认为不具攻击性的女性说话者比男性说话者更具攻击性。这些相互作用效应在实验2中没有被重复。
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