Department of Psychology Adam’s Grant Lecture

Susan Fiske, Princeton University
Adams Lecture, October 7 at 3 p.m. VBR 201
Talking Up, Talking Down: The Power of Positive Speaking

Inequality and power dynamics between people are not going away any time soon. Drawing on three theoretical and empirical foundations–interpersonal positivity biases, stereotype content emphasizing perceived warmth and competence, and the compensation effect (trading off warmth and competence)–we study how people communicate, understand, and present themselves and others, especially across status divides. First, polite communicators omit negativity in describing individuals, especially stereotyped ones. Negativity omission creates innuendo (its absence implies the negative information), which allows stereotype to stagnate. Listeners understand the innuendo and infer the negativity from its omission. Impression-managers understand this dynamic and use positive innuendo: They downplay one aspect (e.g., warmth or competence) to convey the other. Status determines which strategy people use: High-status speakers talk down (warmly), and low-status speakers talk up (competently). Cross-race interactions also show this dynamic. This creates dysfunctional inter-status interactions, the two people operating at crossed purposes.

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