THE SPLIT EAR
The Female Advantage
It's why women hear
so much more
By AUDREY NELSON, PH.D.
Listening is a part of the female
job description and the key
component in facilitating
interpersonal relationships.
Based on my experience as a corporate
communication consultant and
trainer, I would argue that listening is the
most important communication skill. In
this department, women seem to have
the edge.
The “split ear” phenomenon I derived
from Monty Roberts’ observations of an
alpha mare meting out discipline to a
herd of wild mustangs. He noticed that
the mare, when confronting a renegade
and abusive young colt, held one ear forward
and one back, as if she’d divided
her attention. The ear facing backward
was aimed at the rest of the herd and
especially at a young foal this colt had
just kicked. The forward ear was trained
on the “bad boy.” I believe this is analogous
to the split, or double, ear we
observe among women.
Human females have the ability to “listen with two ears.” At any one
time, they may be paying attention on
two or more disparate levels. A woman
hears the verbal message just as a man
would, but she is also reading between
the lines to intercept feelings. That’s
her socio-emotional ear. She evaluates
facial expressions, voice, gestures and
posture — the whole repertoire of nonverbal
behavior — and draws conclusions
from these, as well as from the
other person’s words.
"Women's ability to manage the
flow interaction, to really listen and hear
what people say, and to gather information
from others in a nonthreatening
way is a strength," claims management
consultant Judith Tingley. Certainly in
the work world, most consider the participation
of subordinates as essential to
the effective influencing of staff. But we
also observe this skill every night at the
dinner table, where a woman attempts
to regulate the flow of talk to include
her most reticent child and restrain her
most precociously verbal child from
dominating the conversation.
Perhaps this is why the responders in
my gender communication survey of
1,000 men and women all made the
point that women are better listeners
than men. Here are some of the men’s responses to my question “What do you feel is the greatest
strength in women’s communication?”
• “Women have better listening skills. They look at the
whole picture.”
• “They have the ability to pick up on nonverbals and to listen
completely.”
• “They’re sensitive to the speakers’ feelings and mental
state.”
• “Empathy, inclusiveness, compassion. They have feelings
and emotions.”
• “Women listen to what is meant beyond the words.”
• “Mind reading!”
Why do women listen differently? Part of the answer may
be tied to brain structure. For women, emotional responses
reside in both hemispheres of the brain, which are connected
with the corpus callosum, a thick bundle of nerve fibers —
thicker in women than in men. These fibers facilitate the
exchange of information between the two halves of the brain.
According to genetics expert and television producer Anne
Moir, “This means that more information is being exchanged
between the left and right sides of the female brain than the
male brain. The more connections one has, the more fluent
one is in understanding emotions.”
Predictably, anthropologist Helen Fisher takes a more
anthropological outlook at female listening superiority. From
her point of view, millions of years ago on the grasslands of
Africa, women stayed around the hearth when men left for
months at a time to hunt. A woman’s acute sensitivity to listening
probably developed because of her babies — she had to
listen for their cries while defending against predators.
Some social scientists would argue that since much of
female survival and sex role prescription has depended on the
ability to encode and decode accurately others’ nonverbal cues,
women have had to develop their listening skills more effectively.
In fact, Gloria Steinem has suggested that women’s socalled “intuition” (or “mind reading,” as one of my male survey
participants put it) is not some extraordinary ability but really
a byproduct of their better-developed listening skills.
Whatever the reason, unfortunately, many men feel threatened
by a woman’s ability to glean more from the communication
than they do. They don’t like it. They’ll accuse the
woman of reading too much into their verbal statements. “Well, that’s not how I feel!” they will protest. But women are
paying attention to the nonverbals that qualify the verbal. “You
said you don’t like the furniture I picked out,” a woman may
say, “but here’s what I really think is going on with you.”
Moreover, men don’t want to listen to all the detail that
women feel compelled to share, especially in business situations. “What’s the bottom line?” and “Get to the point!”
were born out of male culture in response to women going
on and on.
Men complain to me, “Women over-communicate. They
have to talk about everything, and they have to beat the topic
to death.” A male manager told me that his female colleague
gave him some excellent insights about their boss. “However,”
he said, "it was way more than I needed or wanted to hear!”
Indeed, since women are process- (and not goal-) oriented,
men believe they are too easily distracted. This adds to the
credibility gap between the genders. The solution? Women can
strive to keep their communications short and to the point. It’s
wise to cut back on excessive verbiage. This is truly a case of
less is more; the men in their lives may listen better with less.
Learning to be more precise in speaking is equivalent to learning to be a good editor of one's own writing. Judith Tingley suggests the only context
in which a woman should use "excessive
wording" is "when she is talking to
women or groups of women, when she
wants them to see her as similar to them."
If a woman has been accused of going
on too long, or if she’s been told to “just
get to the bottom line,” she should learn
to use a pyramid answer style: First reply
with only a one-word or one-sentence
answer. To the question, “Is the report
going to be ready on time?” the proper
answer is, “No, it isn’t.” She can then
build with details in two to four more sentences,
using a bullet-point style and
short, succinct sentences. “The computers
were down. We couldn’t get them up
for three days. . .” and so on rather than
giving a long-winded history of the project’s
failures and successes before coming
to the point.
Dr. Audrey Nelson is an international
corporate communication consultant,
trainer and keynote speaker. Her
book, You Don't Say: Navigating
Nonverbal Communication Between
the Sexes, (Prentice Hall 2004) is available
in five languages. Visit her at
www.audreynelson.com.