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Dive into the research topics where Nicholas A Pearce is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nicholas A Pearce.


Psychological Science | 2009

The Teddy-Bear Effect Does Having a Baby Face Benefit Black Chief Executive Officers?

Robert W. Livingston; Nicholas A Pearce

Prior research suggests that having a baby face is negatively correlated with success among White males in high positions of leadership. However, we explored the positive role of such “babyfaceness” in the success of high-ranking Black executives. Two studies revealed that Black chief executive officers (CEOs) were significantly more baby-faced than White CEOs. Black CEOs were also judged as being warmer than White CEOs, even though ordinary Blacks were rated categorically as being less warm than ordinary Whites. In addition, baby-faced Black CEOs tended to lead more prestigious corporations and earned higher salaries than mature-faced Black CEOs; these patterns did not emerge for White CEOs. Taken together, these findings suggest that babyfaceness is a disarming mechanism that facilitates the success of Black leaders by attenuating stereotypical perceptions that Blacks are threatening. Theoretical and practical implications for research on race, gender, and leadership are discussed.


Psychological Science | 2009

The Teddy-Bear Effect

Robert W. Livingston; Nicholas A Pearce

Prior research suggests that having a baby face is negatively correlated with success among White males in high positions of leadership. However, we explored the positive role of such “babyfaceness” in the success of high-ranking Black executives. Two studies revealed that Black chief executive officers (CEOs) were significantly more baby-faced than White CEOs. Black CEOs were also judged as being warmer than White CEOs, even though ordinary Blacks were rated categorically as being less warm than ordinary Whites. In addition, baby-faced Black CEOs tended to lead more prestigious corporations and earned higher salaries than mature-faced Black CEOs; these patterns did not emerge for White CEOs. Taken together, these findings suggest that babyfaceness is a disarming mechanism that facilitates the success of Black leaders by attenuating stereotypical perceptions that Blacks are threatening. Theoretical and practical implications for research on race, gender, and leadership are discussed.


Review of Sociology | 2010

The Contentiousness of Markets: Politics, Social Movements, and Institutional Change in Markets

Brayden G King; Nicholas A Pearce


Journal of International Affairs | 2013

Ethnic Diversity, Gender, and National Leaders

Susan Perkins; Katherine W. Phillips; Nicholas A Pearce


Archive | 2009

The teddy bear effect: does babyfaceness benefit Black CEOs?

Robert W. Livingston; Nicholas A Pearce


Fortune | 2016

What Wall Street Can Learn From Asian Airlines’ Diversity Problem

Nicholas A Pearce


Fortune | 2015

The Discrimination Debate: Why It Hurt Starbucks, But Worked for Apple

Nicholas A Pearce


Fortune | 2015

The world is still sexist, and Jennifer Lawrence is proof

Nicholas A Pearce


The Huffington Post | 2014

Women Presidents Outperform Their Male Counterparts in Complex Economies

Nicholas A Pearce; Susan Perkins; Katherine W. Phillips


Archive | 2013

Building Self-Esteem: A Youth Sunday Lectionary Commentary: African American Lectionary

Nicholas A Pearce

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