Bibliography
Results 6 - 10 of 232
Author Title Keyword View All
The Destructive Nature of Power Without Status
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 48(1)
Author(s): Nathanael J. Fast, Nir Halevy, Adam D. Galinsky

Abstract: The current research explores how roles that possess power but lack status influence behavior toward others. Past research has primarily examined the ...



Does Power Corrupt or Enable? When and Why Power Facilitates Self-Interested Behavior.
Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 97(3)
Author(s): Katerine A. DeCelles, D. Scott DeRue, Joshua D. Margolis, Tara L. Ceranic

Abstract: Does power corrupt a moral identity, or does it enable a moral identity to emerge? Drawing from the power literature, we propose that the psychologica...



The Powerful Disregard Social Comparison Information
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 48(1)
Author(s): Camille S. Jonson, Joris Lammers

Abstract: Social comparisons are important because other people can serve as benchmarks to determine one's own capabilities and act as sources for inspiration. ...



The Attraction of Social Power: the Influence of Construing Power as Opportunity Versus Responsibility
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 48(2)
Author(s): Kai Sassenberg

Abstract: Social power can be construed as opportunity (focusing on the possibility of one\'s own goal achievement resulting from the control over others’ outco...



Differentiating the Effects of Status and Power: A Justice Perspective.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Vol. 102(5)
Author(s): Steven L. Blader, Ya-Ru Chen

Abstract: Few empirical efforts have been devoted to differentiating status and power, and thus significant questions remain about differences in how status and...



 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next > End >>