From grumpy to cheerful (and back): How power impacts mood in and across different contexts
From grumpy to cheerful (and back): How power impacts mood in and across different contexts
Although lay intuition and some academic theories suggest that power increases variability in mood, the prevailing view in the literature is that power elevates mood—a view that is not consistently borne out in empirical data. To rectify these discrepancies, we conducted five studies examining the impact of high and low power on mood in, and across, contexts of differing valence (negative vs. neutral vs. positive). Drawing on 19,710 observations from 1,042 participants, we found that high (vs. medium/control) power elevated, and low (vs. medium/control) power dampened, individuals’ mood at baseline/in neutral contexts and in positive contexts. However, neither high (vs. medium/control) power nor low (vs. medium/control) power modulated individuals’ mood in negative contexts. Overall, high (vs. medium/control) power tended to increase, and low (vs. medium/control) power decreased variability in mood across contexts (the former effect was marginally significant). We discuss how these findings corroborate, but also qualify, lay intuition and social psychological theories of power.
Context, Mood, Social power, Variability
107-114
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Weick, Mario
7041ee4c-3143-45de-871d-0cde27f4a8f8
18 July 2018
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Weick, Mario
7041ee4c-3143-45de-871d-0cde27f4a8f8
Leach, Stefan and Weick, Mario
(2018)
From grumpy to cheerful (and back): How power impacts mood in and across different contexts.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 79, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jesp.2018.05.004).
Abstract
Although lay intuition and some academic theories suggest that power increases variability in mood, the prevailing view in the literature is that power elevates mood—a view that is not consistently borne out in empirical data. To rectify these discrepancies, we conducted five studies examining the impact of high and low power on mood in, and across, contexts of differing valence (negative vs. neutral vs. positive). Drawing on 19,710 observations from 1,042 participants, we found that high (vs. medium/control) power elevated, and low (vs. medium/control) power dampened, individuals’ mood at baseline/in neutral contexts and in positive contexts. However, neither high (vs. medium/control) power nor low (vs. medium/control) power modulated individuals’ mood in negative contexts. Overall, high (vs. medium/control) power tended to increase, and low (vs. medium/control) power decreased variability in mood across contexts (the former effect was marginally significant). We discuss how these findings corroborate, but also qualify, lay intuition and social psychological theories of power.
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Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2018
Published date: 18 July 2018
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© 2018 Elsevier Inc.
Keywords:
Context, Mood, Social power, Variability
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Local EPrints ID: 503793
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503793
ISSN: 0022-1031
PURE UUID: 079301c3-2cba-4460-9c49-390c06d024ac
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Date deposited: 13 Aug 2025 16:39
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49
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Author:
Stefan Leach
Author:
Mario Weick
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