Frontiers in Psychology (Feb 2024)

Power and vulnerability: managing sensitive language in organizational communication

  • Patrick G. T. Healey,
  • Prashant Khare,
  • Ignacio Castro,
  • Gareth Tyson,
  • Gareth Tyson,
  • Mladen Karan,
  • Ravi Shekhar,
  • Ravi Shekhar,
  • Stephen McQuistin,
  • Stephen McQuistin,
  • Colin Perkins,
  • Matthew Purver,
  • Matthew Purver

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1266425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Organizational responsibilities can give people power but also expose them to scrutiny. This tension leads to divergent predictions about the use of potentially sensitive language: power might license it, while exposure might inhibit it. Analysis of peoples' language use in a large corpus of organizational emails using standardized Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC) measures shows a systematic difference in the use of words with potentially sensitive (ethnic, religious, or political) connotations. People in positions of relative power are ~3 times less likely to use sensitive words than people more junior to them. The tendency to avoid potentially sensitive language appears to be independent of whether other people are using sensitive language in the same email exchanges, and also independent of whether these words are used in a sensitive context. These results challenge a stereotype about language use and the exercise of power. They suggest that, in at least some circumstances, the exposure and accountability associated with organizational responsibilities are a more significant influence on how people communicate than social power.

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