This study examines whether a newly constructed status characteristic stabilizes across interaction contexts and over time, a question central to the diffusion of status value theory. Using a laboratory experiment, undergraduate women from a large public university (valid N = 100) were randomly assigned to high- or low-status positions on a novel status characteristic and then interacted within dyads consisting of participants and confederate partners across two distinct problem-solving tasks. A Latin square design was employed to counterbalance task order and assess whether initial task context moderated subsequent status processes. Influence behaviors were measured across repeated interactions. Results show that the constructed status characteristic reliably shaped influence in early interactions and remained stable across tasks. However, a significant interaction between status and task order indicates that the magnitude of status effects depended on which task participants encountered first. These findings demonstrate that newly created status characteristics can stabilize rapidly within interactional settings while remaining sensitive to task context. By identifying how task order may affect the persistence of novel status distinctions, the study advances research on status construction and clarifies the micro-level processes through which new status beliefs become durable features of social interaction.
Bianchi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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