Popular belief holds that women talk and men act when experiencing a negati
ve emotion. The current study examined whether this belief might influence
hostility perceptions even when men and women express hostility in identica
l ways. Two male and two female actors were trained to express high levels
of both verbal and nonverbal hostility during the Type A Structured Intervi
ew (SI; Rosenman, 1978). Interviewer and actor gender was crossed, resultin
g in four videotaped interviews representing all possible interviewer/actor
gender combinations. Trained male and female coders, who were blind to the
experimental hypotheses, rated the actors as displaying identical levels o
f hostile verbal and nonverbal expression. one hundred five male and 116 fe
male Caucasian undergraduate participants then rated the four videotaped in
terviews for hostility expression levels in a counterbalanced order. Main e
ffects were found for actor gender; female actors were rated as significant
ly more nonverbally hostile and as less verbally hostile than male actors.
No main effects were found for either participant or interviewer gender. It
may be that when women display nonverbal hostility, and men display verbal
hostility, they are perceived as violating social expectancies and rules,
and these deviations from gender-specific expectancies result in a percepti
on of increased hostility, (C) 2000 Academic Press.