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Publisher’s version
Publication year
2010Number of pages
15 p.
Source
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 99, 6, (2010), pp. 978-992ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI SCP
Journal title
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume
vol. 99
Issue
iss. 6
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 978
Page end
p. 992
Subject
Behaviour Change and Well-beingAbstract
Research on linguistic biases shows that stereotypic expectancies are implicitly reflected in language and are thereby subtly communicated to message recipients. We examined whether these findings extend to the use of negations (e.g., not smart instead of stupid). We hypothesized that people use more negations in descriptions of stereotype-inconsistent behavior than in descriptions of stereotype-consistent behavior. In 3 studies, participants either judged the applicability of experimentally controlled person descriptions or spontaneously produced person descriptions themselves. Results provided support for this hypothesis. Moreover, a 4th study demonstrated that negations have communicative consequences. When a target person's behavior was described with negations, message recipients inferred that this behavior was an exception to the rule and that it was more likely caused by situational circumstances than by dispositional factors. These findings indicate that by using negations people implicitly communicate stereotypic expectancies and that negations play a subtle but powerful role in stereotype maintenance.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [227030]
- Electronic publications [108485]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28470]
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