Data for: Responsibility as the Door Opener towards Trust: How Powerholders Construe and Express their Power Impacts Others’ Willingness to Trust Them.
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Winter, Kevin
Scholl, Annika
Abstract / Description
Powerholders make decisions that impact others’ lives. To be effective, powerholders need those with lower power to trust them—often without the chance to establish a good interpersonal relationship beforehand. Yet, societal developments in many countries suggest that willingness to trust powerholders is eroding; this makes the (re)establishment of trust a pressing though potentially difficult endeavour. What makes it likely, then, that people are willing to spontaneously trust a powerholder they barely know? We examined the role of powerholders’ expression that they see (i.e., cognitively construe) power as a responsibility (vs. an opportunity). Doing so, the present work examines the consequences of unknown powerholders’ construal of power from observers’ perspective for the first time and connects it with research on trust. We reasoned that people would be more willing to trust an unknown powerholder who recognizes and expresses their responsibility (vs. opportunity) as a powerholder. Five preregistered studies (N = 1,196) support this prediction for willingness to trust and a downstream effect on powerholder choice in a trust-relevant context. The findings highlight how powerholders’ construal of power affects observers and show that powerholders can promote others’ willingness to trust them by expressing a sense of responsibility (vs. opportunity). Implications for powerholders’ communication in times of distrust and populism are discussed.
Data for: Scholl, A. & Winter, K. (accepted). Responsibility as the Door Opener towards Trust: How Powerholders Construe and Express their Power Impacts Others’ Willingness to Trust Them. Journal of Applied Social Psychology.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2024-06-24
Publisher
PsychArchives
Citation
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Winter, Kevin
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Scholl, Annika
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2024-06-24T15:47:03Z
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Made available on2024-06-24T15:47:03Z
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Date of first publication2024-06-24
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Abstract / DescriptionPowerholders make decisions that impact others’ lives. To be effective, powerholders need those with lower power to trust them—often without the chance to establish a good interpersonal relationship beforehand. Yet, societal developments in many countries suggest that willingness to trust powerholders is eroding; this makes the (re)establishment of trust a pressing though potentially difficult endeavour. What makes it likely, then, that people are willing to spontaneously trust a powerholder they barely know? We examined the role of powerholders’ expression that they see (i.e., cognitively construe) power as a responsibility (vs. an opportunity). Doing so, the present work examines the consequences of unknown powerholders’ construal of power from observers’ perspective for the first time and connects it with research on trust. We reasoned that people would be more willing to trust an unknown powerholder who recognizes and expresses their responsibility (vs. opportunity) as a powerholder. Five preregistered studies (N = 1,196) support this prediction for willingness to trust and a downstream effect on powerholder choice in a trust-relevant context. The findings highlight how powerholders’ construal of power affects observers and show that powerholders can promote others’ willingness to trust them by expressing a sense of responsibility (vs. opportunity). Implications for powerholders’ communication in times of distrust and populism are discussed.en
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Abstract / DescriptionData for: Scholl, A. & Winter, K. (accepted). Responsibility as the Door Opener towards Trust: How Powerholders Construe and Express their Power Impacts Others’ Willingness to Trust Them. Journal of Applied Social Psychology.en
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Review statusunknown
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/10133
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.14692
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherPsychArchives
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Is related tohttps://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/10134
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleData for: Responsibility as the Door Opener towards Trust: How Powerholders Construe and Express their Power Impacts Others’ Willingness to Trust Them.en
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DRO typeresearchData
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Leibniz institute name(s) / abbreviation(s)IWM