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First published online May 25, 2017

How Social Status Shapes Person Perception and Evaluation: A Social Neuroscience Perspective

Abstract

Inferring the relative rank (i.e., status) of others is essential to navigating social hierarchies. A survey of the expanding social psychological and neuroscience literatures on status reveals a diversity of focuses (e.g., perceiver vs. agent), operationalizations (e.g., status as dominance vs. wealth), and methodologies (e.g., behavioral, neuroscientific). Accommodating this burgeoning literature on status in person perception, the present review offers a novel social neuroscientific framework that integrates existing work with theoretical clarity. This framework distinguishes between five key concepts: (1) strategic pathways to status acquisition for agents, (2) status antecedents (i.e., perceptual and knowledge-based cues that confer status rank), (3) status dimensions (i.e., domains in which an individual may be ranked, such as wealth), (4) status level (i.e., one’s rank along a given dimension), and (5) the relative importance of a given status dimension, dependent on perceiver and context characteristics. Against the backdrop of this framework, we review multiple dimensions of status in the nonhuman and human primate literatures. We then review the behavioral and neuroscientific literatures on the consequences of perceived status for attention and evaluation. Finally, after proposing a social neuroscience framework, we highlight innovative directions for future social status research in social psychology and neuroscience.

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Article first published online: May 25, 2017
Issue published: May 2017

Keywords

  1. person evaluation
  2. person perception
  3. socioeconomic status
  4. social cognition
  5. neuroscience
  6. social neuroscience
  7. social status

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PubMed: 28544863

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Bradley D. Mattan
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago
Jennifer T. Kubota
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago
Center for the Study of Race, Politics, and Culture, University of Chicago
Jasmin Cloutier
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago

Notes

Jasmin Cloutier, Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, 5848 S. University Ave., Chicago, IL 60637 E-mail: [email protected]

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