Embodying Power: A Preregistered Replication and Extension of the Power Pose Effect Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Adopting expansive (vs. contractive) body postures may influence psychological states associated with power. The current experiment sought to replicate and extend research on the power pose effect by adding another manipulation that embodies powereye gaze. Participants ( N = 305) adopted expansive (high power) or contractive (low power) poses while gazing ahead (i.e., dominantly) or down at the ground (i.e., submissively). Afterward, participants played a hypothetical ultimatum game, made a gambling decision, and reported how powerful and in charge they felt. Neither body posture nor eye gaze influenced the gambling decision, and contrary to the predictions, adopting an expansive pose reduced feelings of power. We also found that holding a direct gaze increased the probability of rejecting a low offer on the ultimatum game. We consider why power posing did not have the predicted effects.

published proceedings

  • SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PERSONALITY SCIENCE

altmetric score

  • 60.7

author list (cited authors)

  • Garrison, K. E., Tang, D., & Schmeichel, B. J.

citation count

  • 45

complete list of authors

  • Garrison, Katie E||Tang, David||Schmeichel, Brandon J

publication date

  • September 2016