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Leaders in Interdependent Contexts Suppress Nonverbal Assertiveness: A Multilevel Analysis of Japanese University Club Leaders' and Members' Rank Signaling

机译:相互依赖的语境中的领导者抑制非言语肯定性:日本大学俱乐部领导者和成员等级信号的多层次分析

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Previous research has shown that leadership is signaled through nonverbal assertiveness. However, those studies have been mostly conducted in individualistic cultural contexts, such as in the U.S. Here, we suggest that one important strategy for goal attainment in collectivistic cultures is for leaders to self-regulate their behaviors. Thus, contrary to the previous evidence from individualistic cultural contexts, in collectivistic cultural contexts, leaders might suppress nonverbal assertiveness. To test this possibility, we assessed nonverbal behaviors (NVB) of Japanese leaders and members, and how they were evaluated by observers. We recruited Japanese leaders and members of university clubs and video-recorded them while introducing their club. Then, we coded their nonverbal rank signaling behavior. Finally, we asked a new set of naïve observers to watch these video-clips and to judge targets' suitability for being possible club leaders. Results of a multilevel analysis (level 1: individual participants, level 2: clubs) suggested that the more the club culture focused on tasks (rather than relationships), the more likely were leaders (but not members) of those clubs to suppress their nonverbal assertiveness. Naïve observers judged individuals who restrained from emitting nonverbal assertiveness as being more suitable and worthy club leaders. Thus, our findings demonstrate the cultural fit between contextual effects at the collective level (i.e., cultural orientation of a group) and the signaling and perceiving of social ranks at the individual level (i.e., suppression of nonverbal assertiveness). We discuss the importance of studying the cultural fit between the collective reality that people inhabit and people's psychology for future research in cultural psychology.
机译:先前的研究表明,领导力是通过非言语的自信来表达的。但是,这些研究大多是在个人主义文化背景下进行的,例如在美国。在这里,我们建议,在集体主义文化中实现目标的一种重要策略是领导者自我调节自己的行为。因此,与先前来自个人主义文化语境的证据相反,在集体主义文化语境中,领导者可能会压制非语言的自信。为了检验这种可能性,我们评估了日本领导人和成员的非言语行为(NVB),以及观察者对它们的评价。我们招募了日本领导人和大学俱乐部成员,并在介绍他们的俱乐部时对其进行了录像。然后,我们对它们的非语言等级信号行为进行了编码。最后,我们要求新的一组天真的观察者观看这些视频剪辑,并判断目标对象是否适合成为俱乐部领导者。多层次分析的结果(级别1:个人参与者,级别2:俱乐部)表明,俱乐部文化越关注任务(而非关系),这些俱乐部的领导者(而非成员)抑制其非言语的可能性就越大。自信。幼稚的观察者认为,那些克制自己非言语自信的人是更合适,更有价值的俱乐部领导者。因此,我们的发现证明了在集体层面上的语境效应(即群体的文化取向)与个体层面上的社会地位的信号传递和感知(即抑制非言语自信)之间的文化契合。我们讨论了研究人们居住的集体现实与人们的心理之间的文化契合对于文化心理学未来研究的重要性。

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