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...
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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...
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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...
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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...
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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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