2024
DOI: 10.1037/pspa0000380
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Achieving social influence across gender and time: Are dominance and prestige equally viable for men and women?

Hemant Kakkar
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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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References 110 publications
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“…We tested whether targets' perceived power and status ratings from Study 1a predicted societal recognition (H3 and H4). Stereotypes are acquired and reinforced primarily through socialization processes, and the media is an essential source of this information (Kakkar, 2024;Leaper & Friedman, 2007). If men with power are more likely to receive social attention, while women receive attention due to status, this perpetuates gender stereotypes in social hierarchies via socialization.…”
Section: Study 1bmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We tested whether targets' perceived power and status ratings from Study 1a predicted societal recognition (H3 and H4). Stereotypes are acquired and reinforced primarily through socialization processes, and the media is an essential source of this information (Kakkar, 2024;Leaper & Friedman, 2007). If men with power are more likely to receive social attention, while women receive attention due to status, this perpetuates gender stereotypes in social hierarchies via socialization.…”
Section: Study 1bmentioning
confidence: 99%