Authors
Richard Ronay, Joshua M Tybur, Dian van Huijstee, Margot Morssinkhof
Publication date
2017/1/2
Journal
Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology
Volume
2
Issue
1
Pages
28-43
Publisher
Routledge
Description
Previous work has found that configuring participants into high-power versus low-power physical postures caused increases in subjective feelings of power, testosterone, and risk-taking as well as decreases in cortisol. We attempted to replicate and extend this pattern of findings by testing for the mediating role of testosterone and overconfidence in the relationship between power poses and risk-taking. We hypothesized that increases in testosterone in response to high-power poses would lead to increases in overconfidence, and that this indirect pathway would mediate the effect of power posing on risk-taking. We were unable to replicate the findings of the original study and subsequently found no evidence for our extended hypotheses. Overconfidence was unaffected by power posing and unrelated to testosterone, cortisol, and risk-taking. As our replication attempt was conducted in the Netherlands, we discuss …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
R Ronay, JM Tybur, D van Huijstee, M Morssinkhof - Comprehensive Results in Social Psychology, 2017