Beware e-mails of e-males: New Zealand study

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From: Nick Makris (nick@mcn.org)
Date: 06/24/01-03:28:50 PM Z


Perhaps a little insight.

Nick

 MONDAY JUNE 25 2001, The Times

Why females should beware e-males

BY ELIZABETH JUDGE

THE style of an e-mail gives away the writer's gender, according to a
new study.

Just as men and women differ in the way that they communicate face to
face, they also communicate differently on the Internet, researchers in
New Zealand say.

E-mails from women workers are more likely to contain questions and
apologies than those written by men, the researchers say. Women tend to
be complimentary to colleagues in their e-mails and modest about their
own abilities. Men are much more assertive. They tend to convey opinions
rather than to seek them and to insult people in a way that they might
not dare if face to face.

The study is supported by previous research on how men and women take
part in chatrooms--online discussions--on the Internet. They found that
the style of writing and the things they talked about were different.

Men are more likely to swap harsh personal insults on the Net, a
practice known as flaming.

Tamar Murachver, co-author of the study, said that although e-mails are
written, they are sent and received so quickly that they mirror the
interactivity of conversation.

The researchers, from the University of Otago, conducted experiments in
which male and female undergraduates were asked to send e-mails to each
other in which they did not disclose their gender.

The researchers found they could distinguish the e-mails of the men and
women simply by the features that they used. Women used phrases such as
"your poem was good" and "sorry I haven't written". The men conveyed
opinions and tended to write much more than the women.
 


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