Metadata
Title
Compensatory Conspicuous Communication: Low Status Increases Jargon Use
Category
undergraduate
UUID
1f4251307380424d868d86be2c51f7a9
Source URL
https://bm.hkust.edu.hk/bizinsight/2026/01/compensatory-conspicuous-communicatio...
Parent URL
https://bm.hkust.edu.hk/bizinsight/leadership-and-behavioral-decision-making
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T05:26:41+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Compensatory Conspicuous Communication: Low Status Increases Jargon Use

Source: https://bm.hkust.edu.hk/bizinsight/2026/01/compensatory-conspicuous-communication-low-status-increases-jargon-use Parent: https://bm.hkust.edu.hk/bizinsight/leadership-and-behavioral-decision-making

[ Leadership and Behavioral Decision-making ]

Compensatory Conspicuous Communication: Low Status Increases Jargon Use

27 Jan 2026

BROWN, Zachariah

Assistant Professor

ANICICH, Eric M.

GALINSKY, Adam D.

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Jargon is commonly used to efficiently communicate and signal group membership. We propose that jargon use also serves a status compensation function. We first define jargon and distinguish it from slang and technical language. Nine studies, including experiments and archival data analyses, test whether low status increases jargon use. Analyses of 64,000 dissertations found that titles produced by authors from lower-status schools included more jargon than titles from higher-status school authors. Experimental manipulations established that low status causally increases jargon use, even in live conversations. Statistical mediation and experimental-causal-chain analyses demonstrated that the low status. jargon effect is driven by increased concern with audience evaluations over conversational clarity. Additional archival and experimental evidence found that acronyms and legalese serve a similar status-compensation function as other forms of jargon (e.g., complex language). These findings establish a new driver of jargon use and demonstrate that communication, like consumption, can be both compensatory and conspicuous.