Induced Social Power Improves Visual Working Memory

Author:

Hadar Britt1,Luria Roy12,Liberman Nira1

Affiliation:

1. Tel Aviv University, Israel

2. Sagol School of Neuroscience, Tel-Aviv University, Israel

Abstract

The possibility that social power improves working memory relative to conditions of powerlessness has been invoked to explain why manipulations of power improve performance in many cognitive tasks. Yet, whether power facilitates working memory performance has never been tested directly. In three studies, we induced high or low sense of power using the episodic recall task and tested participants’ visual working memory capacity. We found that working memory capacity estimates were higher in the high-power than in the low-power condition in the standard change-detection task (Study 1), in a variation of the task that introduced distractors alongside the targets (Study 2), and in a variation that used real-world objects (Study 3). Studies 2 and 3 also tested whether high power improved working memory relative to low power by enhancing filtering efficiency, but did not find support for this hypothesis. We discuss implications for theories of both power and working memory.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Psychology

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