Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest

Lord and Brown (Lord, Brown, & Freiberg, 1999; Lord & Brown, 2004) suggest that leaders may impact followers by priming certain goals or ideals in their followers’ minds, which in turn influence judgment and behaviour. The current research examined whether transformational and transactional...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Komar, Shawn Gordon
Language:en
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7318
id ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-7318
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-73182013-01-26T03:44:06ZKomar, Shawn Gordon2013-01-25T20:52:09Z2013-01-25T20:52:09Z2013-01-25T20:52:09Z2012http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7318Lord and Brown (Lord, Brown, & Freiberg, 1999; Lord & Brown, 2004) suggest that leaders may impact followers by priming certain goals or ideals in their followers’ minds, which in turn influence judgment and behaviour. The current research examined whether transformational and transactional leaders unconsciously affect the values followers adopt and the goals they pursue, specifically the impact leaders have on follower self-interest. Although the relationship between leadership and self-interest has attracted a good deal of theoretical attention, little empirical work has been conducted to explore the impact of leadership on self-interest. Using established priming techniques, I demonstrated in three studies that transformational and transactional leaders affect self-interest in characteristic ways. In Study 1, participants read about a transformational and transactional leader and were subsequently primed with the image of one of the leaders. The results showed that participants primed with the transformational leader exhibited lower self-interest than those primed with the transactional leader. Study 2 replicated this effect, and demonstrated that the image of the leaders had a nonconscious effect on participants’ self-interest that was measurable after a delay of three days. Furthermore, this study found that participants’ pre-existing levels of prosocial values moderated the effectiveness of the prime. Study 3 extended the results of the first two studies by demonstrating that priming participants with a transformational leader significantly lowered self-interest in a context where individual gain was salient, and the transactional leader increased self-interest in a context focused on collective outcomes.enLeadershipSelf-InterestImplicitPrimingGoalsValuesImplicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-InterestThesis or DissertationPsychologyDoctor of PhilosophyPsychology
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Leadership
Self-Interest
Implicit
Priming
Goals
Values
Psychology
spellingShingle Leadership
Self-Interest
Implicit
Priming
Goals
Values
Psychology
Komar, Shawn Gordon
Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
description Lord and Brown (Lord, Brown, & Freiberg, 1999; Lord & Brown, 2004) suggest that leaders may impact followers by priming certain goals or ideals in their followers’ minds, which in turn influence judgment and behaviour. The current research examined whether transformational and transactional leaders unconsciously affect the values followers adopt and the goals they pursue, specifically the impact leaders have on follower self-interest. Although the relationship between leadership and self-interest has attracted a good deal of theoretical attention, little empirical work has been conducted to explore the impact of leadership on self-interest. Using established priming techniques, I demonstrated in three studies that transformational and transactional leaders affect self-interest in characteristic ways. In Study 1, participants read about a transformational and transactional leader and were subsequently primed with the image of one of the leaders. The results showed that participants primed with the transformational leader exhibited lower self-interest than those primed with the transactional leader. Study 2 replicated this effect, and demonstrated that the image of the leaders had a nonconscious effect on participants’ self-interest that was measurable after a delay of three days. Furthermore, this study found that participants’ pre-existing levels of prosocial values moderated the effectiveness of the prime. Study 3 extended the results of the first two studies by demonstrating that priming participants with a transformational leader significantly lowered self-interest in a context where individual gain was salient, and the transactional leader increased self-interest in a context focused on collective outcomes.
author Komar, Shawn Gordon
author_facet Komar, Shawn Gordon
author_sort Komar, Shawn Gordon
title Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
title_short Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
title_full Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
title_fullStr Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
title_full_unstemmed Implicit Leadership: Exploring the Role of Leaders on the Implicit Activation of Self-Interest
title_sort implicit leadership: exploring the role of leaders on the implicit activation of self-interest
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/7318
work_keys_str_mv AT komarshawngordon implicitleadershipexploringtheroleofleadersontheimplicitactivationofselfinterest
_version_ 1716576453758287872