Litcius/Paper detail

Boring People: Stereotype Characteristics, Interpersonal Attributions, and Social Reactions

Wijnand A. P. van Tilburg, Eric R. Igou, Mehr Panjwani

2022Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Unfortunately, some people are perceived as boring. Despite the potential relevance that these perceptions might have in everyday life, the underlying psychological processes and consequences of perceiving a person as "boring" have been largely unexplored. We examined the stereotypical features of boring others by having people generate (Study 1) and then rate (Study 2) these. We focused on occupations (e.g., data analytics, taxation, and accounting), hobbies (e.g., sleeping, religion, and watching TV), and personal characteristics (e.g., lacking humor and opinions, being negative) that people ascribed to stereotypically boring others. Experiments then showed that those who were ascribed boring characteristics were seen as lacking interpersonal warmth and competence (Study 3), were socially avoided (Study 4), and enduring their company required compensation (Study 5). These results suggest that being stereotyped as a bore may come with substantially negative interpersonal consequences.

Topics & Concepts

AttributionPsychologySocial psychologyStereotype (UML)Interpersonal communicationStereotype threatSocial perceptionInterpersonal perceptionPerceptionNeuroscienceMind wandering and attentionGrit, Self-Efficacy, and MotivationOptimism, Hope, and Well-being