Kusano Kodai, Kemmelmeier Markus
Division of Science, Psychology, New York University Abu Dhabi, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Interdisciplinary Social Psychology Ph.D. Program, University of Nevada, Reno, Reno, USA.
Sci Rep. 2025 Mar 27;15(1):10524. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-93858-w.
This study examines how people react to different types of high social rank displays during negotiations. We focused on two ways people display high rank: dominance (using force or intimidation) and prestige (demonstrating competence and earning respect). In a pre-registered experiment (N = 309), we tested whether these displays would influence people to make fair offers in a negotiation game. Participants first competed in tasks where they were outperformed by their negotiation partner, creating a power difference. They then decided how much money to share with this partner. We found that participants offered more money to partners who displayed prestige after demonstrating superior performance. However, when partners displayed dominance despite similar superior performance, participants did not increase their offers compared to a neutral condition without power differences, and this pattern persisted even under compliance pressure. A path model revealed that expressions of authentic pride (associated with prestige), but not hubristic pride (associated with dominance), explained why participants made fairer offers. These findings suggest that earning and showing respect through prestige is more effective than asserting dominance when negotiating from a position of power.
本研究考察了人们在谈判过程中对不同类型的高社会地位展示如何做出反应。我们聚焦于人们展示高地位的两种方式:支配(使用武力或恐吓)和威望(展示能力并赢得尊重)。在一项预先注册的实验(N = 309)中,我们测试了这些展示是否会影响人们在谈判游戏中提出公平的报价。参与者首先在任务中竞争,在这些任务中他们被谈判伙伴超越,从而造成权力差异。然后他们决定与该伙伴分享多少钱。我们发现,在展示出卓越表现后,参与者会向展示出威望的伙伴提供更多金钱。然而,当伙伴尽管表现同样卓越却展示出支配时,与没有权力差异的中性条件相比,参与者并没有提高他们的报价,而且这种模式即使在顺从压力下也持续存在。一个路径模型显示,真实自豪(与威望相关)的表达,而非傲慢自豪(与支配相关)的表达,解释了为什么参与者会提出更公平的报价。这些发现表明,当从权力地位进行谈判时,通过威望赢得并展示尊重比主张支配更有效。