When Women Ask, Does Curiosity Help?

Alexandra A. Mislin, Ece Tuncel, Lucie Prewitt
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Abstract

This research examines the potential social benefits of displaying curiosity during a negotiation. Past research has found women who ask directly in distributive agentic settings can suffer negative social consequences and obtain worse objective outcomes compared to men. In three experiments (N = 600) using different negotiation contexts, we found men and women who approach negotiations with curiosity reap the same economic benefits of asking directly but without incurring a social cost. We also found that perceived warmth partially accounts for the positive effects of curiosity (vs. asking directly) on negotiators’ social outcomes. Finally, our results reveal women feel more comfortable conveying curiosity compared to using a direct approach in their negotiations. We discuss the implications of these findings in enhancing negotiation effectiveness for both women and men.
当女性提出问题时,好奇心会有帮助吗?
本研究探讨了在谈判中表现出好奇心的潜在社会效益。过去的研究发现,与男性相比,在分配代理环境中直接提问的女性会遭受负面的社会后果,并获得更差的客观结果。在使用不同谈判情境的三个实验(N = 600)中,我们发现,以好奇心对待谈判的男性和女性都能获得与直接询问相同的经济收益,但不会产生社会成本。我们还发现,好奇心(与直接询问相比)对谈判者社交结果的积极影响部分归因于感知到的温暖。最后,我们的研究结果表明,在谈判中,女性在表达好奇心时比使用直接方式时感觉更舒服。我们将讨论这些发现对提高女性和男性谈判效率的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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