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Does Power Magnify the Expression of Dispositions?
Psychological Science, Vol. 23(5)
Author(s): Ana Guinote, Mario Weick, Alice Cai

Abstract: Conventional wisdom holds that power holders act more in line with their dispositions than do people who lack power. Drawing on principles of construc...



Seeing Wrath From the Top (Through Stratified Lenses): Perceivers High in Social Dominance Orientation Show Superior Anger Identification for High-Status Individuals
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Advance Online publication (June 2, 2012)
Author(s): Nathaniel J. Ratcliff, Michael J. Bernstein, Jessica L. Cundiff, Theresa K. Vescio

Abstract: In this research, we test the hypothesis that social status will be an orienting cue to the identification of facial expressions of emotion, particula...



The Allure of Status: High-Status Targets Are Privileged in Face Processing and Memory
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 37(8)
Author(s): Nathaniel J. Ratcliff, Kurt Hugenberg, Edwin R. Shriver, Michael J. Bernstein

Abstract: The current research tests the hypothesis that face processing is attuned to high-status faces. Across three experiments, faces of high-status targets...



Male Susceptibility to Attentional Capture by Power Cues
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 46(2)
Author(s): Malia F. Mason, Shu Zhang, Rebecca L. Dyer

Abstract: The present investigation explores the possibility that power has increased salience among males but not females. Evidence indicates that stimuli that...



Power, Individuation, and the Cross-Race Recognition Deficit
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Vol. 46(5)
Author(s): Edwin R. Shriver, Kurt Hugenberg

Abstract: The well-known Cross-Race Effect (CRE) in facial recognition is observed as better recognition for faces of one’s own race than faces of another race....



 
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