Smith Pamela K, Jostmann Nils B, Galinsky Adam D, van Dijk Wilco W
Department of Social Psychology, Behavioural Science Institute, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Psychol Sci. 2008 May;19(5):441-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02107.x.
Four experiments explored whether lacking power impairs executive functioning, testing the hypothesis that the cognitive presses of powerlessness increase vulnerability to performance decrements during complex executive tasks. In the first three experiments, low power impaired performance on executive-function tasks: The powerless were less effective than the powerful at updating (Experiment 1), inhibiting (Experiment 2), and planning (Experiment 3). Existing research suggests that the powerless have difficulty distinguishing between what is goal relevant and what is goal irrelevant in the environment. A fourth experiment established that the executive-function impairment associated with low power is driven by goal neglect. The current research implies that the cognitive alterations arising from powerlessness may help foster stable social hierarchies and that empowering employees may reduce costly organizational errors.
四项实验探究了权力缺失是否会损害执行功能,检验了这样一个假设:无力感带来的认知压力会增加在复杂执行任务中表现下降的易感性。在前三项实验中,低权力状态损害了执行功能任务的表现:在更新信息(实验1)、抑制(实验2)和规划(实验3)方面,无权者比有权者效率更低。现有研究表明,无权者在区分环境中与目标相关和与目标无关的事物时存在困难。第四项实验证实,与低权力相关的执行功能损害是由目标忽视导致的。当前的研究表明,无力感引起的认知变化可能有助于形成稳定的社会等级制度,赋予员工权力可能会减少代价高昂的组织失误。