Behavioral and Valuation Contingency: Why the Same Dispositions Lead to Different Social Evaluations Across Contexts

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Abstract

Studies have linked personality dispositions to important social evaluations, such as howmuch power individuals are granted, or how much they are liked. Yet, these links are notalways consistent and seem to depend on the social context. We zeroed in on this issue,testing two mutually non-exclusive hypotheses on how the context might moderate the effectsof personality dispositions on perceptions of power and likability in newly formed groups.The behavior contingency hypothesis posits that the context moderates the extent to which adisposition is expressed in behavior. The valuation contingency hypothesis posits that thecontext moderates the extent to which disposition-specific behavior is valued. In a roundrobinstudy, we found support for both hypotheses with regard to perceptions of power (butnot with regard to likability). The findings reveal the importance of behavior expression andvaluation in the processes underlying personality-situation interactions in power hierarchies.

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