
Are
you having trouble persuading people to your point of view? Express
yourself more stridently. That's what researchers at Washington State
University discovered. Victoria Woollaston of the
Daily Mail writes:
They
analysed more than a billion tweets posted during various American
sporting events, including the 2013 Super Bowl, to the test whether
being accurate or being confident made Twitter users more popular.
Despite
professional pundits and amateur fans making a similar amount of
correct and incorrect predictions, the tweeters who 'yelled' louder were
seen as more trustworthy and had more followers.
To test the
theory, two economic students from the university studied the language
used by sports pundits who often 'yell' for attention.
Jadrien
Wooten and Ben Smith compared the tweets of professional pundits -
celebrities with verified Twitter accounts - with amateur tweeters that
claimed to have some sports expertise in their bio. […]
Words like 'vanquish,' 'destroy' and 'annihilate' posted in Tweets were considered to be confident words.
The researchers used these confident words in place of being able to measure loudness online.
The research found that the professionals were correct with their predictions 47 per cent of the time.
Whereas the amateurs made accurate predictions in 45 per cent of cases.
However, the professionals were more confident, scoring a .480 confidence rating compared to the amateurs' .313.
If
a professional pundit accurately predicted every game of the baseball
playoffs and series, the authors estimated his or her Twitter following
would increase 3.4 per centr
While an amateur would get 7.3 per cent more followers.
A
confident professional would increase his or her following by nearly 17
per cent, whereas a 'loud' amateur would get 20 per cent more
followers.
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