Language style on trial: Effects of “powerful” and “powerless” speech upon judgments of victims and villains

Two studies are reported. The first examined consequences of “powerful”; and “powerless”; speech styles on attribution of fault to a defendant and plaintiff in a hypothetical courtroom context. A powerless style included hedges, intensifiers, polite forms, hesitation forms, and deictic phrases; a powerful style omitted these while including short or one‐word replies. Results suggested that subjects attributed greater fault to the high‐power style, regardless of whether the speaker was the plaintiff or defendant. Also, female subjects saw the alleged act as more serious when the speaker exhibited the high‐power style in the role of defendant. The second study included a high‐ or low‐power version of the testimony of a second speaker. In this case, subjects read two messages, contrasting in role (defendant vs. plaintiff) and power (high vs. low). Results for seriousness and fault were not replicated. In this case, power of style had a strong effect on judgments of communicator “internality.”; Results of bot...

[1]  R. Conville Linguistic nonimmediacy and self-presentation. , 1975, The Journal of psychology.

[2]  J. Bowers,et al.  THREE LANGUAGE VARIABLES IN COMMUNICATION RESEARCH: INTENSITY, IMMEDIACY, AND DIVERSITY , 1979 .

[3]  E. Aronson,et al.  Attribution of fault to a rape victim as a function of respectability of the victim. , 1973, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[4]  Richness of Vocabulary: An Attributional Analysis , 1977 .

[5]  R. B. Freeman Function of cues in the perceptual learning of visual slant: an experimental and theoretical analysis. , 1966, Psychological monographs.

[6]  A. Chase The great pellagra cover-up: eugenics v. poor white trash. , 1975, Psychology today.

[7]  J. Bowers Language intensity, social introversion, and attitude change , 1963 .

[8]  S. Kasl,et al.  THE RELATIONSHIP OF DISTURBANCES AND HESITATIONS IN SPONTANEOUS SPEECH TO ANXIETY. , 1965, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[9]  E. E. Jones,et al.  From Acts To Dispositions The Attribution Process In Person Perception1 , 1965 .

[10]  M. Burgoon,et al.  TOWARD A MESSAGE‐CENTERED THEORY OF PERSUASION: THREE EMPIRICAL INVESTIGATIONS OF LANGUAGE INTENSITY1 , 1975 .

[11]  K. Dion,et al.  Physical attractiveness and evaluation of children's transgressions. , 1972, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[12]  William M. O'Barr,et al.  Speech style and impression formation in a court setting: The effects of “powerful” and “powerless” speech , 1978 .

[13]  B. J. Winer Statistical Principles in Experimental Design , 1992 .

[14]  G. S. Stern,et al.  Interal locus of control as a value , 1977 .

[15]  J. Rotter Generalized expectancies for internal versus external control of reinforcement. , 1966, Psychological monographs.

[16]  Lawrence A. Hosman,et al.  Reciprocal disclosures and language intensity: Attributional consequences , 1978 .

[17]  F. Heider The psychology of interpersonal relations , 1958 .

[18]  Cabot L. Jaffee,et al.  Effects of Rates of Talking and Correctness of Decisions on Leader Choice in Small Groups , 1969 .

[19]  R. Zajonc Attitudinal effects of mere exposure. , 1968 .

[20]  H. Giles,et al.  Speech style and social evaluation , 1975 .

[21]  R. Lakoff Language and woman's place , 1973, Language in Society.

[22]  V. Derlega,et al.  Liking for the norm-breaker in self-disclosure. , 1974, Journal of personality.

[23]  A. Miller Social Perception of Internal-External Control , 1970, Perceptual and motor skills.