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The fluency of social hierarchy: The ease with which hierarchical relationships are seen, remembered, learned, and liked

Authors :
Larissa Z. Tiedens
Emily M. Zitek
Source :
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 102:98-115
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2012.

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that social hierarchies are fluent social stimuli; that is, they are processed more easily and therefore liked better than less hierarchical stimuli. In Study 1, pairs of people in a hierarchy based on facial dominance were identified faster than pairs of people equal in their facial dominance. In Study 2, a diagram representing hierarchy was memorized more quickly than a diagram representing equality or a comparison diagram. This faster processing led the hierarchy diagram to be liked more than the equality diagram. In Study 3, participants were best able to learn a set of relationships that represented hierarchy (asymmetry of power)--compared to relationships in which there was asymmetry of friendliness, or compared to relationships in which there was symmetry--and this processing ease led them to like the hierarchy the most. In Study 4, participants found it easier to make decisions about a company that was more hierarchical and thus thought the hierarchical organization had more positive qualities. In Study 5, familiarity as a basis for the fluency of hierarchy was demonstrated by showing greater fluency for male than female hierarchies. This study also showed that when social relationships are difficult to learn, people's preference for hierarchy increases. Taken together, these results suggest one reason people might like hierarchies--hierarchies are easy to process. This fluency for social hierarchies might contribute to the construction and maintenance of hierarchies.

Details

ISSN :
19391315 and 00223514
Volume :
102
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dee3f7750efc06371c3c7094e722abb3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1037/a0025345