• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

“Boomerasking”: There’s Finally A Name For This Self-Centered Conversational Habit

January 29, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Ever asked someone a question with the sole intention that they ask you the same question back? Turns out there’s a name for that: “boomerasking”. A new study has explored exactly what this often-irritating conversational habit is, as well as why people do it and the consequences that it has.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The term “boomerasking” refers to a question that acts in the same way as a boomerang – it’s designed to quickly come back to the person who threw it. According to the researchers behind the study, Alison Wood Brooks from Harvard Business School and Michael Yeomans from Imperial College London, there are three types of these so-called “boomerasks”.

First, there’s “ask-bragging” – that’s when someone asks a question and then discloses something positive. An example of this might be when someone asks you what you got for Christmas, only to respond to your answer with a laundry list of all the expensive gifts they received.

The second type is “ask-complaining”, when someone asks a question following by talking about something negative – like asking how someone else’s vacation was only to moan how yours got rained out, everyone got sick, and your ruined your new sneakers.

Finally, there’s “ask-sharing”. This one is a question followed by a neutral disclosure – the study authors give the example of someone wanting to share the weird dream they had – but is still very much done with the intention of the question-asker answering themselves.

Annoying, right? So why exactly do people do this? To find out, Brooks and Yeomans cut straight to the chase and asked the boomeraskers themselves, as part of a survey completed by 155 participants.

“Individuals believe that boomerasking offers several advantages over overt disclosure,” the researchers write of their results. For example, they found that some of the participants believed that “prefacing a disclosure with a question will make their partner(s) feel more included in the conversation.” 

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

Others felt that if they just outrightly spoke about what they wanted to, it would violate conversational norms. “Prompting another’s opinion seems more appropriate than just spouting whatever comes to mind,” said one participant.

Despite best intentions, Brooks and Yeomans found that boomerasking usually leaves something of a sour taste in the mouth of the person on the receiving end.

“Though boomeraskers believe they leave positive impressions, in practice, their decision to share their own answer – rather than follow up on their partner’s – appears egocentric and disinterested in their partner’s perspective. As a result, people perceive boomeraskers as insincere and prefer conversation partners who straightforwardly self-disclose,” the authors write. Ouch.

Luckily, there might just be a boomerasking “antidote”. Brooks and Yeomans believe that simply being aware of what boomerasking is and its negative consequences may help, as well as trying to be a more responsive conversational partner – that means actively engaging with what someone is saying through things like affirmation and validation.

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

For the so-called “chronic” boomeraskers, it’s suggested that they could try to ask questions that they can’t answer themselves; that way, they can learn how to be more responsive in a conversation.

However, Brooks and Yeomans also believe there’s no reason for people to stop talking about themselves entirely.

“At some point, self-disclosure following your own question becomes not only tolerable but important for mutual involvement and balance in the conversation or the relationship more broadly,” the authors conclude. 

“Future work could identify how long interlocutors should wait to self-disclose after asking a question – to help individuals strike a productive balance between being both interested in their partners and interesting themselves.”

ADVERTISEMENT GO AD FREE

The study is published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Russia arrests top cybersecurity executive in treason case
  2. Is LK-99 A Superconductor Or Not? What To Know About Recent Superconductor Claims
  3. The Mystery Of The Oldest Mummy In Africa
  4. Incredibly Rare Footage Of Bigfin Squid 3,300 Meters Deep In The Pacific

Source Link: “Boomerasking”: There’s Finally A Name For This Self-Centered Conversational Habit

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Surveillance Of People Is More “Pervasive And Normalised” Than Previously Thought, Endangering Our Privacy
  • US Sees 90 Percent Drop In Heart Attack Deaths Over Last 50 Years
  • Is A Cat Poop Parasite Decapitating Human Sperm Contributing To Rising Infertility?
  • How Fast Were Dinosaurs? Guineafowl Races Reveal They Were Probably Slower Than We Thought
  • New Claim For World’s Oldest Rocks Dates Back A Whopping 4.16 Billion Years
  • Pre-Inca Temple Was A “Ritual Gateway” To Lost Civilization Of Tiwanaku
  • NASA Study Gave Illegal Drugs To Spiders And Watched What Happened To Their Webs
  • Space Selfies & DJing A Party From Orbit – How Astronaut Luca Parmitano Brought Space To Earth
  • Regardless Of Political Affiliation, Most US Adults Actually Support Vaccine Requirements For Kids
  • Now Is The Perfect Time To See The “Summer Triangle”
  • Can A Brain Be Preserved And Uploaded? Neuroscientist Survey Reveals “Surprising” 40 Percent Probability That Yes, It Could
  • You Could Be The First Ever Human To See A Specific Galaxy In This Incredible Space Video
  • First Pieces Of The Planet Mercury May Have Been Found On Earth After “Longstanding Mystery”
  • “Miracle” Bioplastic Reflects 99 Percent Of Sun’s Rays, Massively Reducing Building Energy Use
  • Are These 2 African Gray Parrots The Only Non-Human Animals To Ever Ask A Question?
  • How Forensic Scientists Are Reconstructing Faces Using DNA Found At Crime Scenes
  • New Non-Invasive Option For Treating Non-Melanoma Skin Cancer In A Single Session
  • Evolution Running Backwards? That’s What This Unlikely Organism Appears To Be Doing
  • How Did The Starfish Become A Star? 500-Million-Year-Old Fossil Solves Evolutionary Mystery
  • JWST Has Discovered Its First Exoplanet – And It’s A Baby Saturn-Sized One!
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version