Body posture and gender impact neural processing of power-related words

ABSTRACT Judging others’ power facilitates successful social interaction. Both gender and body posture have been shown to influence judgments of another’s power. However, little is known about how these two cues interact when they conflict or how they influence early processing. The present study investigated this question during very early processing of power-related words using event-related potentials (ERPs). Participants viewed images of women and men in dominant and submissive postures that were quickly followed by dominant or submissive words. Gender and posture both modulated neural responses in the N2 latency range to dominant words, but for submissive words they had little impact. Thus, in the context of dual-processing theories of person perception, information extracted from both behavior (i.e., posture) and from category membership (i.e., gender) are recruited side-by-side to impact word processing.

[1]  E Donchin,et al.  A new method for off-line removal of ocular artifact. , 1983, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology.

[2]  Joseph Dien,et al.  Applying Principal Components Analysis to Event-Related Potentials: A Tutorial , 2012, Developmental neuropsychology.

[3]  Michael J. Cody,et al.  Body Politics Revisited: What Do We Know Today?: Nancy M. Henley , 2012 .

[4]  Z. Khairullah,et al.  Sex and the Single Armrest: Use of Personal Space during Air Travel , 1982 .

[5]  A. Eagly,et al.  Are leader stereotypes masculine? A meta-analysis of three research paradigms. , 2011, Psychological bulletin.

[6]  A. Greenwald Within-subjects designs: To use or not to use? , 1976 .

[7]  L. Tiedens,et al.  Power moves: complementarity in dominant and submissive nonverbal behavior. , 2003, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[8]  C. Keating,et al.  Power Displays Between Women and Men in Discussions of Gender-Linked Tasks: A Multichannel Study , 1988 .

[9]  C. Ridgeway,et al.  Nonverbal Behavior, Dominance, and the Basis of Status in Task Groups , 1987 .

[10]  Joseph Berger,et al.  STATUS ORGANIZING PROCESSES , 1980 .

[11]  Jane D. Parent,et al.  Gender and Managerial Stereotypes: Have the Times Changed? , 2002 .

[12]  Russell Spears,et al.  The Power of a Smile to Move You , 2012, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[13]  Luning Wang,et al.  Event-related potential N270, a negative component to identification of conflicting information following memory retrieval , 2003, Clinical Neurophysiology.

[14]  E. Donchin,et al.  Probability effects on stimulus evaluation and response processes. , 1992, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[15]  Jaime L. Napier,et al.  A bed of thorns: Female leaders and the self-reinforcing cycle of illegitimacy , 2016 .

[16]  E. Vogel,et al.  The visual N1 component as an index of a discrimination process. , 2000, Psychophysiology.

[17]  Amy J. C. Cuddy,et al.  Power Posing , 2010, Psychological science.

[18]  Linda L. Carli,et al.  Nonverbal behavior, gender, and influence. , 1995 .

[19]  Mark E. Slama,et al.  Evolutionary psychology: The new science of the mind (2nd ed.) , 2005 .

[20]  Reginald B. Adams,et al.  Knowing Who's Boss: fMRI and ERP Investigations of Social Dominance Perception , 2008, Group processes & intergroup relations : GPIR.

[21]  Judith A. Hall,et al.  Nonverbal behavior and the vertical dimension of social relations: a meta-analysis. , 2005, Psychological bulletin.

[22]  Steven L. Neuberg,et al.  A Continuum of Impression Formation, from Category-Based to Individuating Processes: Influences of Information and Motivation on Attention and Interpretation , 1990 .

[23]  S. Luck,et al.  Electrophysiological correlates of feature analysis during visual search. , 1994, Psychophysiology.

[24]  M. Russell Harter,et al.  Effects of attention and arousal on visually evoked cortical potentials and reaction time in man , 1969 .

[25]  Jonathan R. Folstein,et al.  Influence of cognitive control and mismatch on the N2 component of the ERP: a review. , 2007, Psychophysiology.

[26]  K. White,et al.  Wait, what? Assessing stereotype incongruities using the N400 ERP component. , 2009, Social cognitive and affective neuroscience.

[27]  Adam D. Galinsky,et al.  Power: Past findings, present considerations, and future directions. , 2015 .

[28]  J. Kissler,et al.  Buzzwords , 2007, Psychological science.

[29]  M. Graham,et al.  Science faculty’s subtle gender biases favor male students , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[30]  J. Kissler,et al.  Emotion and attention in visual word processing—An ERP study , 2009, Biological Psychology.

[31]  S. Kelly,et al.  Neural correlates of bimodal speech and gesture comprehension , 2004, Brain and Language.

[32]  April H. Bailey,et al.  Picture Power: Gender Versus Body Language in Perceived Status , 2015 .

[33]  Robert Gifford,et al.  A lens-mapping framework for understanding the encoding and decoding of interpersonal dispositions in nonverbal behavior. , 1994 .

[34]  Li Huang,et al.  Powerful Postures Versus Powerful Roles , 2011, Psychological science.

[35]  Marina Schmid,et al.  An Introduction To The Event Related Potential Technique , 2016 .

[36]  N. Ambady,et al.  Thin slices of expressive behavior as predictors of interpersonal consequences: A meta-analysis. , 1992 .

[37]  Ping Yang Nonverbal gender differences: examining gestures of university-educated Mandarin Chinese speakers , 2010 .

[38]  Judith A. Hall,et al.  Who Is the Boss and Who Is Not? Accuracy of Judging Status , 2004 .

[39]  M Martín-Loeches,et al.  An early electrophysiological sign of semantic processing in basal extrastriate areas. , 2001, Psychophysiology.

[40]  Adam D. Galinsky,et al.  Stand tall, but don't put your feet up: Universal and culturally-specific effects of expansive postures on power , 2013 .

[41]  H. Meeren,et al.  Rapid perceptual integration of facial expression and emotional body language. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[42]  B. de Gelder,et al.  Body expressions influence recognition of emotions in the face and voice. , 2007, Emotion.

[43]  Peter M Visscher,et al.  Sizing up human height variation , 2008, Nature Genetics.

[44]  Amy J. C. Cuddy,et al.  Universal dimensions of social cognition: warmth and competence , 2007, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[45]  Gregory A. Miller,et al.  Generalized Implementation of an Eye Movement Correction Procedure , 1988 .

[46]  Amy J. C. Cuddy,et al.  Review and Summary of Research on the Embodied Effects of Expansive (vs. Contractive) Nonverbal Displays , 2015, Psychological science.

[47]  N. Dasgupta,et al.  Seeing is believing: Exposure to counterstereotypic women leaders and its effect on the malleability of automatic gender stereotyping , 2004 .