Artigo Revisado por pares

Effects of Responding or Not Responding to Hecklers on Audience Agreement with a Speaker

1976; Wiley; Volume: 6; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1559-1816.1976.tb01307.x

ISSN

1559-1816

Autores

Richard E. Petty, Timothy C. Brock,

Tópico(s)

Language, Discourse, Communication Strategies

Resumo

The hypothesis that responding to hecklers would produce more agreement with a speaker than not responding, stemmed from commodity theory (Brock, 1968). One hundred twenty‐one introductory speech students participated in what they were told was a “speech workshop” (not a psychology experiment). Two types of responding to live hecklers were used: In one, the speaker responded in a calm, relevant manner; in the other, she responded in an upset, irrelevant manner. In a third condition, the speaker did not respond to the heckles. There were two additional conditions: One in which the speaker responded to interruptions, and a further control in which there were neither heckles nor interruptions. In these five conditions, the speaker either argued for or against the audience's position. Regardless of whether or not the speaker's position agreed with the audience's, upset‐irrelevant responding decreased the speaker's persuasiveness over making no response, while calm‐relevant responding tended to enhance persuasiveness. Finally, in agreement with all other empirical studies, it was clearly shown that heckling, whether responded to or not, did not improve the speaker's effectiveness.

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