Contrast the Strunk, White, Orwell et al. approach of directness and writing with verbs. I have often preferred that approach throughout my life, and appreciate reading writers who employ that approach.
Yet as I get older, I find myself in more and more situations in which I am read and perceived as confrontational, difficult, or accosting, to an extent that I rarely want. The main dynamics of particular situations aside, I wonder if too much brushstroke with verbs did not help my cause.
Also, it may be worth noting, as Gertrude Stein put it: Sentences are not emotional, but paragraphs are.
When writing this is called passive writing. In verbal communications when trying to effect something is colloquially known as passive aggressiveness.
Defining new nouns as abstractions is also key to the practice of dehumanization. None of this seems remotely novel.
I would be interested in studies that correlate brain activity with receiving predominantly verb/active vs predominantly noun/passive communications. Maybe the piece gets into work in that area, I don't know.