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The effects of message recipients' power before and after persuasion: a self-validation analysis. | LitMetric

The effects of message recipients' power before and after persuasion: a self-validation analysis.

J Pers Soc Psychol

Department of Social Psychology and Methodology, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Campus de Cantoblancu, Madrid 28049, Spain.

Published: December 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The researchers explored how a person's power affects their attitudes and social judgments, suggesting that feeling powerful increases confidence.
  • In several experiments, they found that the timing of when power is induced plays a crucial role in persuasion.
  • They indicated that feeling powerful before hearing a message can reinforce pre-existing beliefs, while feeling powerful after processing a message can lead individuals to rely more on their thoughts when forming new attitudes.

Article Abstract

In the present research, the authors examined the effect of a message recipient's power on attitude change and introduced a new mechanism by which power can affect social judgment. In line with prior research that suggested a link between power and approach tendencies, the authors hypothesized that having power increases confidence relative to being powerless. After demonstrating this link in Experiment 1, in 4 additional studies, they examined the role of power in persuasion as a function of when power is infused into the persuasion process. On the basis of the idea that power validates whatever mental content is accessible, they hypothesized that power would have different effects on persuasion depending on when power was induced. Specifically, the authors predicted that making people feel powerful prior to a message would validate their existing views and thus reduce the perceived need to attend to subsequent information. However, it was hypothesized that inducing power after a message has been processed would validate one's recently generated thoughts and thus influence the extent to which people rely upon their thoughts in determining their attitudes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.93.6.1040DOI Listing

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