Abstract

Previous research has shown that leadership is signaled through nonverbal assertiveness. However, those studies have been mostly conducted in individualistic cultural contexts, such as in the U.S. Here, we suggest that one important strategy for goal attainment in collectivistic cultures is for leaders to self-regulate their behaviors. Thus, contrary to the previous evidence from individualistic cultural contexts, in collectivistic cultural contexts, leaders might suppress nonverbal assertiveness. To test this possibility, we assessed nonverbal behaviors (NVB) of Japanese leaders and members, and how they were evaluated by observers. We recruited Japanese leaders and members of university clubs and video-recorded them while introducing their club. Then, we coded their nonverbal rank signaling behavior. Finally, we asked a new set of naïve observers to watch these video-clips and to judge targets' suitability for being possible club leaders. Results of a multilevel analysis (level 1: individual participants, level 2: clubs) suggested that the more the club culture focused on tasks (rather than relationships), the more likely were leaders (but not members) of those clubs to suppress their nonverbal assertiveness. Naïve observers judged individuals who restrained from emitting nonverbal assertiveness as being more suitable and worthy club leaders. Thus, our findings demonstrate the cultural fit between contextual effects at the collective level (i.e., cultural orientation of a group) and the signaling and perceiving of social ranks at the individual level (i.e., suppression of nonverbal assertiveness). We discuss the importance of studying the cultural fit between the collective reality that people inhabit and people's psychology for future research in cultural psychology.

Highlights

  • Using a thin-slice approach of nonverbal behavior (NVB) (Ambady and Rosenthal, 1992), we investigate the cultural fit between the culture of a given group and their leaders’ and members’ nonverbal behaviors (NVB), and we test perceivers’ perceptions of leadership worthiness when watching these thin-slice recordings

  • To test our key hypothesis whether club leaders compared to club members would signal their superior social rank and whether this tendency was enhanced within task-oriented club cultures, we conducted a hierarchical linear model with NVB as the dependent variable: Individual Level: NVBij = β0j + β1j(Social Rank)ij + β2(Task − Oriented Club Cultureindividual)ij + β3(Social Rank × Task − Oriented Club Cultureindividual)ij + rij

  • We focused on Japanese leaders and members of university clubs

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Social hierarchy is a fundamental dimension organizing interpersonal interactions (Fiske, 1992), because it reduces intragroup conflict (Anderson et al, 2006; Bendersky and Shah, 2012), improves decision-making (Van Vugt et al, 2008), coordinates collective locomotion (Blau, 1964; Hardy and Van Vugt, 2006; Keltner et al, 2008; Willer, 2009), and increases team performance (Halevy et al, 2012; Ronay et al, 2012; Anicich et al, 2015). Among collectivistic cultures, there is an emphasis on collective goals facilitating interpersonal interdependence (Yamaguchi, 1994) and on leadership styles focusing on the connectedness and social harmony amongst group members (Misumi and Peterson, 1985; Menon et al, 2010). It appears that because groups differ in their shared goals, leadership styles in interdependent cultures, and especially in Japan, might fit their group’s focus on social harmony. We expect that the cultural emphasis on suppressing nonverbal assertiveness will be especially pronounced among prototypes of interdependent cultures, that is their leaders Initial support for this idea comes from organizational studies showing that interdependence might be important for the achievement of goals in collectivistic cultures. Hypothesis 2 holds that the reduced emission of nonverbal signals of assertiveness should be perceived as signal of greater leadership ability and worthiness in Japanese culture

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
Body shifting
Nonverbal expression
DISCUSSION
ETHICS STATEMENT
Full Text
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