Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power

Depending on their motivation, individuals prefer different group contexts for social interactions. The present research sought to provide more insight into this relationship. More specifically, we tested how challenge / threat and a promotion / prevention focus predict attraction to groups with hig...

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Main Authors: Annika eScholl, Claudia eSassenrath, Kai eSassenberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-04-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00397/full
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spelling doaj-c8b99d7c7e5e4a438c0edb95337f096d2020-11-24T21:04:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782015-04-01610.3389/fpsyg.2015.00397122917Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group powerAnnika eScholl0Claudia eSassenrath1Kai eSassenberg2Kai eSassenberg3Knowledge Media Research CenterKnowledge Media Research CenterKnowledge Media Research CenterUniversity of TuebingenDepending on their motivation, individuals prefer different group contexts for social interactions. The present research sought to provide more insight into this relationship. More specifically, we tested how challenge / threat and a promotion / prevention focus predict attraction to groups with high or low power. As such, we examined differential outcomes of threat and prevention focus as well as challenge and promotion focus that have often been regarded as closely related. According to regulatory focus, individuals should prefer groups that they expect to feel right for them to join: Low-power groups should be more attractive in a prevention (than a promotion) focus, as these groups suggest security-oriented strategies, which fit a prevention focus. High-power groups should be more attractive in a promotion (rather than a prevention) focus, as these groups are associated with promotion strategies fitting a promotion focus (Sassenberg, Jonas, Shah, & Brazy, 2007). In contrast, under threat (vs. challenge), groups that allow individuals to restore their (perceived) lack of control should be preferred: Low-power groups should be less attractive under threat (than challenge) because they provide low resources which threatened individuals already perceive as insufficient and high-power groups might be more attractive under threat (than under challenge), because their high resources allow individuals to restore control. Two experiments (N = 140) supported these predictions. The attractiveness of a group often depends on the motivation to engage in what fits (i.e., prefer a group that feels right in the light of one’s regulatory focus). However, under threat the striving to restore control (i.e., prefer a group allowing them to change the statuts quo under threat vs. challenge) overrides the fit effect, which may in turn guide individuals’ behavior in social interactions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00397/fullthreatgroupschallengeregulatory focussocial power
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annika eScholl
Claudia eSassenrath
Kai eSassenberg
Kai eSassenberg
spellingShingle Annika eScholl
Claudia eSassenrath
Kai eSassenberg
Kai eSassenberg
Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
Frontiers in Psychology
threat
groups
challenge
regulatory focus
social power
author_facet Annika eScholl
Claudia eSassenrath
Kai eSassenberg
Kai eSassenberg
author_sort Annika eScholl
title Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
title_short Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
title_full Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
title_fullStr Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
title_full_unstemmed Attracted to power: Challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
title_sort attracted to power: challenge / threat and promotion / prevention focus differentially predict the attractiveness of group power
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2015-04-01
description Depending on their motivation, individuals prefer different group contexts for social interactions. The present research sought to provide more insight into this relationship. More specifically, we tested how challenge / threat and a promotion / prevention focus predict attraction to groups with high or low power. As such, we examined differential outcomes of threat and prevention focus as well as challenge and promotion focus that have often been regarded as closely related. According to regulatory focus, individuals should prefer groups that they expect to feel right for them to join: Low-power groups should be more attractive in a prevention (than a promotion) focus, as these groups suggest security-oriented strategies, which fit a prevention focus. High-power groups should be more attractive in a promotion (rather than a prevention) focus, as these groups are associated with promotion strategies fitting a promotion focus (Sassenberg, Jonas, Shah, & Brazy, 2007). In contrast, under threat (vs. challenge), groups that allow individuals to restore their (perceived) lack of control should be preferred: Low-power groups should be less attractive under threat (than challenge) because they provide low resources which threatened individuals already perceive as insufficient and high-power groups might be more attractive under threat (than under challenge), because their high resources allow individuals to restore control. Two experiments (N = 140) supported these predictions. The attractiveness of a group often depends on the motivation to engage in what fits (i.e., prefer a group that feels right in the light of one’s regulatory focus). However, under threat the striving to restore control (i.e., prefer a group allowing them to change the statuts quo under threat vs. challenge) overrides the fit effect, which may in turn guide individuals’ behavior in social interactions.
topic threat
groups
challenge
regulatory focus
social power
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00397/full
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AT kaiesassenberg attractedtopowerchallengethreatandpromotionpreventionfocusdifferentiallypredicttheattractivenessofgrouppower
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