As usual, this video should be considered extra material, for you to enjoy and/or comment in class.
TED Talks
June 2012
So I want to start by offering you a free
no-tech life hack, and all it requires of you is this: that you change your
posture for two minutes. But before I give it away, I want to ask you to right
now do a little audit of your body and what you're doing with your body. So how
many of you are sort of making yourselves smaller? Maybe you're hunching,
crossing your legs, maybe wrapping your ankles. Sometimes we hold onto our arms
like this. Sometimes we spread out. I see you. So I want you to pay attention
to what you're doing right now. We're going to come back to that in a few
minutes, and I'm hoping that if you learn to
tweak this a little bit, it could significantly change the way your life
unfolds.
So, we're really fascinated with body
language, and we're particularly interested in other people's body language.
You know, we're interested in, like, you know, an awkward interaction, or a smile, or a contemptuous glance, or maybe a very awkward wink, or maybe even something like a handshake.
Narrator
Here they are arriving at Number 10, and
look at this lucky policeman gets to shake hands with the President of the
United States. Oh, and here comes the Prime Minister of the…? No.
Amy Cuddy
So a handshake, or the lack of a handshake,
can have us talking for weeks and weeks and weeks. Even the BBC and The New
York Times. So obviously when we think about nonverbal behavior, or body
language -but we call it nonverbals as social scientists- it's language, so we
think about communication. When we think about communication, we think about
interactions. So what is your body language communicating to me? What's mine
communicating to you?
And there's a lot of reason to believe that
this is a valid way to look at this. So social scientists have spent a lot of
time looking at the effects of our body language, or other people's body
language, on judgments. And we make sweeping
judgments and inferences from body language. And those judgments can
predict really meaningful life outcomes
like who we hire or promote, who we ask out on a date.
For example, Nalini Ambady, a researcher at
Tufts University, shows that when people watch 30-second soundless clips of
real physician-patient interactions, their judgments of the physician's
niceness predict whether or not that physician will be sued. So it doesn't have to do so much with whether or not that
physician was incompetent, but do we like that person and how they
interacted?
Even more dramatic, Alex Todorov at
Princeton has shown us that judgments of political candidates' faces in just
one second predict 70% of U.S. Senate and gubernatorial race outcomes, and even, let's go digital, emoticons used well
in online negotiations can lead to you claim more value from that negotiation.
If you use them poorly, bad idea. Right? So when we think of nonverbals, we
think of how we judge others, how they judge us and what the outcomes are. We tend to forget, though, the other audience
that's influenced by our nonverbals, and that's ourselves.
We are also influenced by our nonverbals,
our thoughts and our feelings and our physiology. So what nonverbals am I
talking about? I'm a social psychologist. I study prejudice, and I teach at a
competitive business school, so it was inevitable that I would become
interested in power dynamics. I became especially interested in nonverbal
expressions of power and dominance.
And what are nonverbal expressions of power
and dominance? Well, this is what they are. So in the animal kingdom, they are
about expanding. So you make yourself big, you stretch out, you take up space,
you're basically opening up. It's
about opening up. And this is true across the animal kingdom. It's not just
limited to primates.
And humans do the same thing. So they do
this both when they have power sort of chronically, and also when they're
feeling powerful in the moment. And this one is especially interesting because
it really shows us how universal and old these expressions of power are. This
expression, which is known as pride, Jessica Tracy has studied. She shows that
people who are born with sight and people who are congenitally blind do this
when they win at a physical competition. So when they cross the finish line and
they've won, it doesn't matter if they've never seen anyone do it. They do
this. So the arms up in the V, the chin
is slightly lifted.
What do we do when we feel powerless? We do
exactly the opposite. We close up.
We wrap ourselves up. We make
ourselves small. We don't want to bump
into the person next to us. So again, both animals and humans do the same
thing. And this is what happens when you put together high and low power. So
what we tend to do when it comes to power is that we complement the other's
nonverbals. So if someone is being really powerful with us, we tend to make
ourselves smaller. We don't mirror
them. We do the opposite of them.
So I'm watching this behavior in the
classroom, and what do I notice? I notice that MBA students really exhibit the full range of power nonverbals. So
you have people who are like caricatures of alphas, really coming into
the room, they get right into the middle of the room before class even starts,
like they really want to occupy space. When they sit down, they're sort of spread out. They raise their
hands like this.
You have other people who are virtually collapsing when they come in.
As soon they come in, you see it. You see it on their faces and their bodies,
and they sit in their chair and they make themselves tiny, and they go like this when they raise their hand.
I notice a couple of things about this.
One, you're not going to be surprised. It seems to be related to gender. So
women are much more likely to do this kind of thing than men. Women feel
chronically less powerful than men, so this is not surprising. But the other
thing I noticed is that it also seemed to be related to the extent to which the
students were participating, and how well they were participating. And this is
really important in the MBA classroom, because participation counts for half
the grade.
So business schools have been struggling with this gender grade gap. You get these equally qualified
women and men coming in and then you get these differences in grades, and it
seems to be partly attributable to participation. So I started to wonder, you
know, okay, so you have these people coming in like this, and they're
participating. Is it possible that we could get people to fake it and would it lead them to participate more?
So my main collaborator Dana Carney, who's
at Berkeley, and I really wanted to know, can you fake it till you make it? Like, can you do this just for a little
while and actually experience a behavioral outcome that makes you seem more
powerful? So we know that our nonverbals govern how other people think and feel
about us. There's a lot of evidence. But our question really was, do our
nonverbals govern how we think and feel about ourselves?
There's some evidence that they do. So, for
example, we smile when we feel happy, but also, when we're forced to smile by
holding a pen in our teeth like this, it makes us feel happy. So it goes both
ways. When it comes to power, it also goes both ways. So when you feel
powerful, you're more likely to do this, but it's also possible that when you
pretend to be powerful, you are more likely to actually feel powerful.
So the second question really was, you
know, so we know that our minds change our bodies, but is it also true that our
bodies change our minds? And when I say minds, in the case of the powerful,
what am I talking about? So I'm talking about thoughts and feelings and the
sort of physiological things that make
up our thoughts and feelings, and in my case, that's hormones. I look at
hormones.
So what do the minds of the powerful versus
the powerless look like? So powerful people tend to be, not surprisingly, more
assertive and more confident, more optimistic. They actually feel that they're
going to win even at games of chance. They also tend to be able to think more
abstractly. So there are a lot of differences. They take more risks. There are
a lot of differences between powerful and powerless people.
Physiologically, there also are differences
on two key hormones: testosterone, which is the dominance hormone, and
cortisol, which is the stress hormone. So what we find is that high-power alpha
males in primate hierarchies have high testosterone and low cortisol, and
powerful and effective leaders also have high testosterone and low cortisol. So
what does that mean?
When you think about power, people tended
to think only about testosterone, because that was about dominance. But really,
power is also about how you react to stress. So do you want the high-power
leader that's dominant, high on testosterone, but really stress reactive?
Probably not, right? You want the person who's powerful and assertive and
dominant, but not very stress reactive, the person who's laid back.
So we know that in primate hierarchies, if
an alpha needs to take over, if an individual needs to take over an alpha role
sort of suddenly, within a few days, that individual's testosterone has gone up
significantly and his cortisol has dropped significantly.
So we have this evidence, both that the
body can shape the mind, at least at the facial level, and also that role
changes can shape the mind. So what happens, okay, you take a role change, what
happens if you do that at a really minimal level, like this tiny manipulation,
this tiny intervention? "For two minutes," you say, "I want you
to stand like this, and it's going to make you feel more powerful."
So this is what we did. We decided to bring
people into the lab and run a little experiment, and these people adopted, for
two minutes, either high-power poses or low-power poses, and I'm just going to
show you five of the poses, although they took on only two. So here's one. A
couple more. This one has been dubbed
the "Wonder Woman" by the media. Here are a couple more. So you can
be standing or you can be sitting. And here are the low-power poses. So you're folding up, you're making yourself
small. This one is very low-power. When you're touching your neck, you're
really protecting yourself. So this is what happens. They come in, they spit into a vial, we for two
minutes say, "You need to do this or this." They don't look at
pictures of the poses. We don't want to
prime them with a concept of power. We want them to be feeling power,
right? So two minutes they do this. We then ask them, "How powerful do you
feel?" on a series of items, and then we give them an opportunity to gamble, and then we take another
saliva sample. That's it. That's the whole experiment.
So this is what we find. Risk tolerance,
which is the gambling, what we find is that when you're in the high-power pose
condition, 86 percent of you will gamble. When you're in the low-power pose
condition, only 60 percent, and that's a
pretty whopping significant difference. Here's what we find on
testosterone. From their baseline when they come in, high-power people
experience about a 20-percent increase, and low-power people experience about a
10-percent decrease. So again, two minutes, and you get these changes.
Here's what you get on cortisol. High-power
people experience about a 25-percent decrease, and the low-power people
experience about a 15-percent increase. So two minutes lead to these hormonal
changes that configure your brain to basically be either assertive,
confident and comfortable, or really stress-reactive, and, you know, feeling sort of shut down. And we've
all had the feeling, right? So it seems that our nonverbals do govern how we
think and feel about ourselves, so it's not just others, but it's also
ourselves. Also, our bodies change our minds.
But the next question, of course, is can power posing for a few minutes really
change your life in meaningful ways? So this is in the lab. It's this little
task, you know, it's just a couple of minutes. Where can you actually apply
this? Which we cared about, of course. And so we think it's really, what matters,
I mean, where you want to use this is evaluative situations like social threat
situations. Where are you being evaluated, either by your friends? Like for
teenagers it's at the lunchroom table.
It could be, you know, for some people it's speaking at a school board meeting.
It might be giving a pitch or giving
a talk like this or doing a job interview. We decided that the one that most
people could relate to because most people had been through was the job
interview.
So we published these findings, and the
media are all over it, and they say:
Okay, so this is what you do when you go in for the job interview, right? You
know, so we were of course horrified, and said, Oh my God, no, no, no, that's
not what we meant at all. For numerous reasons, no, no, no, don't do that.
Again, this is not about you talking to other people. It's you talking to
yourself. What do you do before you go into a job interview? You do this.
Right? You're sitting down. You're looking at your iPhone -- or your Android,
not trying to leave anyone out. You
are, you know, you're looking at your notes, you're hunching up, making yourself small, when really what you should be
doing maybe is this, like, in the bathroom, right? Do that. Find two minutes.
So that's what we want to test. Okay?
So we bring people into a lab, and they do
either high- or low-power poses again, they go through a very stressful job
interview. It's five minutes long. They are being recorded. They're being
judged also, and the judges are trained to give no nonverbal feedback, so they
look like this. Like, imagine this is the person interviewing you. So for five
minutes, nothing, and this is worse than being
heckled. People hate this. It's what Marianne LaFrance calls "standing
in social quicksand." So this
really spikes your cortisol. So this
is the job interview we put them through, because we really wanted to see what
happened.
We then have these coders look
at these tapes, four of them. They're blind to the hypothesis. They're blind to
the conditions. They have no idea who's been posing in what pose, and they end
up looking at these sets of tapes, and they say, "Oh, we want to hire
these people," -all the high-power posers- "we don't want to hire
these people. We also evaluate these people much more positively overall."
But what's driving it? It's not about the content of the speech. It's about the
presence that they're bringing to the speech. We also, because we rate them on
all these variables related to competence, like, how well-structured is the speech?
How good is it? What are their qualifications? No effect on those things. This
is what's affected. These kinds of things. People are bringing their true
selves, basically. They're bringing themselves. They bring their ideas, but as
themselves, with no, you know, residue
over them. So this is what's driving the effect, or mediating the effect.
So when I tell people about this, that our
bodies change our minds and our minds can change our behavior, and our behavior
can change our outcomes, they say to me, "I don't… It feels fake."
Right? So I said, fake it till you make it. I don't… It's not me. I don't want
to get there and then still feel like a fraud. I don't want to feel like an
impostor. I don't want to get there only to feel like I'm not supposed to be here.
And that really resonated with me,
because I want to tell you a little story about being an impostor and feeling
like I'm not supposed to be here.
When I was 19, I was in a really bad car
accident. I was thrown out of a car, rolled several times. I was thrown from
the car. And I woke up in a head injury rehab
ward, and I had been withdrawn from college, and I learned that my I.Q. had
dropped by two standard deviations, which was very traumatic. I knew my I.Q.
because I had identified with being smart, and I had been called gifted as a
child. So I'm taken out of college, I keep trying to go back. They say,
"You're not going to finish college. Just, you know, there are other
things for you to do, but that's not going to
work out for you." So I really struggled with this, and I have to say,
having your identity taken from you, your core
identity, and for me it was being smart, having that taken from you,
there's nothing that leaves you feeling more powerless than that. So I felt
entirely powerless. I worked and worked and worked, and I got lucky, and
worked, and got lucky, and worked.
Eventually I graduated from college. It
took me four years longer than my peers, and I convinced someone, my angel
advisor, Susan Fiske, to take me on,
and so I ended up at Princeton, and I was like, I am not supposed to be here. I
am an impostor. And the night before my first-year talk, and the first-year
talk at Princeton is a 20-minute talk to 20 people. That's it. I was so afraid of being found out the next day that I
called her and said, "I'm quitting."
She was like, "You are not quitting, because I took a gamble on you, and you're staying. You're going to stay,
and this is what you're going to do. You are going to fake it. You're going to
do every talk that you ever get asked to do. You're just going to do it and do
it and do it, even if you're terrified and just paralyzed and having an out-of-body experience, until you
have this moment where you say, 'Oh my gosh, I'm doing it. Like, I have become
this. I am actually doing this.'" So that's what I did. Five years in grad
school, a few years, you know, I'm at Northwestern, I moved to Harvard, I'm at
Harvard, I'm not really thinking about it anymore, but for a long time I had
been thinking, "Not supposed to be here. Not supposed to be here."
So at the end of my first year at Harvard,
a student who had not talked in class the entire semester, who I had said,
"Look, you've gotta participate
or else you're going to fail," came into my office. I really didn't know
her at all. And she said, she came in totally defeated, and she said, "I'm not supposed to be here."
And that was the moment for me. Because two things happened. One was that I
realized, oh my gosh, I don't feel like that anymore. You know. I don't feel
that anymore, but she does, and I get that feeling. And the second was, she is
supposed to be here! Like, she can fake it, she can become it. So I was like,
"Yes, you are! You are supposed to be here! And tomorrow you're going to
fake it, you're going to make yourself powerful, and, you know, you're gonna…
". "And you're going to go into the classroom, and you are going to
give the best comment ever." You know? And she gave the best comment ever,
and people turned around and they
were like, oh my God, I didn't even notice her sitting there, you know?
She comes back to me months later, and I
realized that she had not just faked it till she made it, she had actually
faked it till she became it. So she had changed. And so I want to say to you,
don't fake it till you make it. Fake it till you become it. You know? It's not:
Do it enough until you actually become it and internalize.
The last thing I'm going to leave you with
is this. Tiny tweaks can lead to big
changes. So this is two minutes. Two minutes, two minutes, two minutes. Before
you go into the next stressful evaluative situation, for two minutes, try doing
this, in the elevator, in a bathroom stall,
at your desk behind closed doors. That's what you want to do. Configure
your brain to cope the best in that
situation. Get your testosterone up. Get your cortisol down. Don't leave that
situation feeling like, oh, I didn't show them who I am. Leave that situation
feeling like, oh, I really feel like I got to say who I am and show who I am.
So I want to ask you first, you know, both
to try power posing, and also I want to ask you to share the science, because
this is simple. I don't have ego involved
in this. Give it away. Share it with people, because the people who can use it
the most are the ones with no resources and no technology and no status and no
power. Give it to them because they can do it in private. They need their
bodies, privacy and two minutes, and it can significantly change the outcomes
of their life. Thank you.
Glossary
to tweak = to adjust, make alterations, adapt, change
awkward (interaction) = difficult,
embarrassing, unpleasant, strained, uncomfortable
contemptuous (glance) = scornful,
disdainful, condescending, vain
glance = brief, quick look
wink = closing and opening one eye
quickly
sweeping (judgements) = exhaustive,
pervasive, thorough, in depth, radical
judgement = criticism, analysis, evaluation
meaningful (outcomes) = significant,
important, worthwhile, weighty, valid
outcome = result, consequence, upshot,
effect, aftermath, conclusion, development
to be sued = to be prosecuted, charged, brought to trial, taken to
court
to go (digital) = to turn, become, come to be
to open up = to become more communicative or confiding
chin = the lower front of the mandible
= mentón, barbilla
to close up = to wrap up, become hostile
to bump into = to encounter, meet by chance, run into, come across,
stumble on
to mirror = to reflect, match, simulate, mimic, echo
MBA = Master in Business Administration
sort of = to some extent, in some way or
other
to spread out = to extend, stretch, open out, sprawl
virtually = practically, roughly, almost,
just about to
to collapse = to slump, give way, fall apart
tiny = minuscule, diminutive, reduced,
micro, minor OPPOSITE huge, enormous
to struggle with sth = to make one's way with difficulty, try hard,
strive, make every effort
gap = split, contrast, disparity,
divergence
to fake (it)= to pretend, simulate, sham, make-believe
to make (our thoughts) up =
to comprise, form, compose, constitute
to be laid back = to be relaxed, at ease, unemotional, cool
to be dubbed = to be nicknamed, called, labelled, christened,
denominated
to fold up = to bend one's arms
to spit - spat - spat = to eject saliva forcibly from one's mouth =
escupir
a vial = a small
container, typically cylindrical and made of glass, used especially for holding
liquid medicines
to prime sb = to prepare, equip, gear up
to gamble = to bet, stake money on sth, take a risk
whopping (significant difference) = huge,
massive, gigantic, towering
(to feel) shut down = confined, imprisoned,
caged, surrounded
to pose = to behave affectedly, posture, put on an act
lunchroom (table) = a school or office
canteen
(to give a) pitch = to make a presentation, try to
persuade sb
all over it = everywhere
to leave sb out = to omit,
neglect, pass over, forget
to hunch up = to curl up, crouch, bend, stoop
to be heckled = to be shut down, booed, interrupted, harassed
quicksand = loose wet sand that yields to
pressure and sucks in anything
to spike (cortisol) = to increase and then decrease rapidly
residue = remainder, remnants
to resonate with sb = to evoke memories and images
rehab = rehabilitation
ward = a separate room in a hospital
to work out (for sb) = to
succeed, turn out well, go as planned, be effective
core (identity) = central, essential,
primary, principal
to take sb on = to engage, enrol, sigh up
That's it = That is the main point
to quit = to leave, resign, give up, walk out
to take a gamble on sb = to risk, take a chance
out-of-body experience = a sensation of
being outside one's body, typically of floating and being able to observe
oneself from a distance
you've gotta = you've got to
to be defeated = to be overpowered, overcome
to turn around = to look back, move backwards
stall = a compartment
to cope = to manage, deal with, confront, tackle
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