Abstract

While ample evidence supports an association between power and dominance, little is still known about how temporary experiences of power influence the way people come to see themselves and others. The present research investigates the effect of social power on self- and other-face recognition, and examines whether gender modulates the direction of this effect. Male and female participants were induced to feel either powerful or powerless and had to recognize their own face and those of same-sex strangers from a series of images ranging from a dominant to a submissive version of the original. Results showed that males more frequently chose a dominant self-image under high power, whereas females selected a submissive self-image under low power. When presented with faces of same-sex targets female participants relied on low-power features (i.e., submissiveness) of the self in the perception of others (assimilation effect), whereas male participants more often selected a dominant image of strangers when feeling powerless (constrast effect). The effects of power did not extend to more deliberate judgments of dominance and likability, suggesting that respective biases in face recollection operated at an implicit level. This research underscores the cognitive and motivational underpinnings of power and related gender gaps in power attainment.

Highlights

  • The ability to detect one’s own face has been regarded as a precursor to self-awareness (Keenan et al, 2003) and is a core component for identity recognition (Bruce & Young, 1986)

  • Socially shared expectations that link women with submissiveness may constitute the preferred point of view (Bailey & Kelly, 2015). This could lead to the visual representation of own faces in which the self is predominantly aligned with perceptions of low power/dominance

  • They possess more democratic and participative leadership styles that have team-building character (Eagly & Johnson, 1990). Given their greater focus on relationshipmaintaining behaviors, women may adopt the self-concept as a reference point for perceiving others. They respond in assimilative ways by relying on features related to the self in other-face recognition

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to detect one’s own face has been regarded as a precursor to self-awareness (Keenan et al, 2003) and is a core component for identity recognition (Bruce & Young, 1986). Identifying self and other faces entails the matching of structural and configural aspects of a seen face to an internal representation in memory (Tanaka & Sengco, 1997). People generally show high expertise in processing faces relative to other categories of stimuli (Tong & Nakayama, 1999), existing evidence suggests that face memory is not static but can be subject to systematic biases (e.g., Balcetis & Dunning, 2006; Hugenberg et al, 2011)

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Aims of the present research
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