Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"power" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Investigating Workplace Bullying Using a Person-Centered Approach: Capturing Targets Exposure and Sense of Defenselessness Through Latent Profile Analysis Trépanier SG; Notelaers G; Birkeland Nielsen M; Morin AJS; 41902650
CONCORDIA
2 Entrepreneurship as a driver of rural women s empowerment in Iran Rezaei-Moghaddam K; Fatemi M; Ghafouri M; Golkarfard M; 41290906
ENCS
3 Queer occultism, sentimental biopower, and becoming bottoms as a means to divest from white supremacy among practitioners of magic in Montreal Sydney Sheedy 40078317
CONCORDIA
4 Effects of early midlife ovarian removal on sleep: Polysomnography-measured cortical arousal, homeostatic drive, and spindle characteristics Brown A; Gervais NJ; Gravelsins L; O' Byrne J; Calvo N; Ramana S; Shao Z; Bernardini M; Jacobson M; Rajah MN; Einstein G; 39178647
HKAP
5 The effects of competition and implicit power motive on men's testosterone, emotion recognition, and aggression Vongas JG; Al Hajj R; 28455183
JMSB
6 A Multilevel Person-Centered Perspective on the Role of Job Demands and Resources for Employees' Job Engagement and Burnout Profiles Gillet N; Morin AJS; Blais AR; 38698872
CONCORDIA
7 Microstructure of Deposits Sprayed by a High Power Torch with Flash Boiling Atomization of High-Concentration Suspensions Amrollahy Biouki S; Ben Ettouil F; C Liberati A; Dolatabadi A; Moreau C; 38612008
ENCS
8 A longitudinal investigation of structural empowerment profiles among healthcare employees Cougot B; Gillet N; Morin AJS; Gauvin J; Ollierou F; Moret L; Tripodi D; 38093467
CONCORDIA
9 Update on air pollution control strategies for coal-fired power plants Asif Z; Chen Z; Wang H; Zhu Y; 35572480
ENCS
10 Age of Acquisition Modulates Alpha Power During Bilingual Speech Comprehension in Noise Grant AM; Kousaie S; Coulter K; Gilbert AC; Baum SR; Gracco V; Titone D; Klein D; Phillips NA; 35548507
CRDH
11 Efficient Authentication Protocol and Its Application in Resonant Inductive Coupling Wireless Power Transfer Systems Ahene E; Ofori-Oduro M; Twum F; Walker J; Missah YM; 34960339
ENCS
12 Feasibility of Pressure-Retarded Osmosis for Electricity Generation at Low Temperatures Abbasi-Garravand E; Mulligan CN; 34436319
ENCS
13 Work Fatigue Profiles: Nature, Implications, and Associations With Psychological Empowerment. Blais AR, Gillet N, Houle SA, Comeau CA, Morin AJS 33329261
CONCORDIA
14 A Benchmark of Data Stream Classification for Human Activity Recognition on Connected Objects. Khannouz M; Glatard T; 33202905
ENCS
15 Differences in MEG and EEG power-law scaling explained by a coupling between spatial coherence and frequency: a simulation study. Bénar CG, Grova C, Jirsa VK, Lina JM 31292816
PERFORM
16 The relationship between exercise intensity, cerebral oxygenation and cognitive performance in young adults. Mekari S, Fraser S, Bosquet L, Bonnéry C, Labelle V, Pouliot P, Lesage F, Bherer L 26063061
PERFORM

 

Title:The effects of competition and implicit power motive on men's testosterone, emotion recognition, and aggression
Authors:Vongas JGAl Hajj R
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28455183/
DOI:10.1016/j.yhbeh.2017.04.005
Publication:Hormones and behavior
Keywords:AggressionCompetitionEmotion recognitionImplicit power motiveTestosterone
PMID:28455183 Category: Date Added:2017-04-30
Dept Affiliation: JMSB
1 Ithaca College, School of Business, Department of Management, 953 Danby Road, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA. Electronic address: jvongas@ithaca.edu.
2 Concordia University, John Molson School of Business, Department of Management, 1455 De Maisonneuve West, Montreal, QC H3G 1M8, Canada. Electronic address: raghid.alhajj@concordia.ca.

Description:

A contribution to a special issue on Hormones and Human Competition. We investigated the effects of competition on men's testosterone levels and assessed whether androgen reactivity was associated with subsequent emotion recognition and reactive and proactive aggression. We also explored whether personalized power (p Power) moderated these relationships. In Study 1, 84 males competed on a number tracing task and interpreted emotions from facial expressions. In Study 2, 72 males competed on the same task and were assessed on proactive and reactive aggression. In both studies, contrary to the biosocial model of status (Mazur, 1985), winners' testosterone levels decreased significantly while losers' levels increased, albeit not significantly. Personalized power moderated the effect of competition outcome on testosterone change in both studies. Using the aggregate sample, we found that the effect of decreased testosterone levels among winners (compared to losers) was significant for individuals low in p Power but not for those with medium or high p Power. Testosterone change was positively related to emotion recognition, but unrelated to either aggression subtype. The testosterone-mediated relationship between winning and losing and emotion recognition was moderated by p Power. In addition, p Power moderated the direct (i.e., non-testosterone mediated) path between competition outcome and emotion recognition and both types of aggression: high p-Power winners were more accurate at deciphering others' emotions than high p-Power losers. Finally, among high p-Power men, winners aggressed more proactively than losers, whereas losers aggressed more reactively than winners. Collectively, these studies highlight the importance of implicit power motivation in modulating hormonal, cognitive, and behavioral outcomes arising from human competition.





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