Why Some People in Positions of Power Show Signs of Brain DamageWhen people gain power, they sometimes lose the ability to empathize with others.

ByLydia Belanger

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Peshkova | Getty Images

When someone becomes successful but stays grounded, people are often pleasantly surprised. But what is it about power, in any of its forms, that makes people less relatable?

It's not simply intimidation felt by those in the lower ranks. As a series of studies has demonstrated, power changes those who earn it down to the neurological level, as reported in the July/August 2017 issue ofThe Atlantic.

Dacher Keltner, a psychology professor at UC Berkeley, spent two decades studying the effects of power and discovered that powerful people exhibit behaviors associated with traumatic brain injury: impulsivity, diminished risk-awareness and a weakened ability to see things from another person's perspective.

Related:Legendary Leaders Are Inspirational, Empathetic Master Psychologists

年代ukhvinder Obhi, a neuroscientist at McMaster University in Ontario, took his experiment a step farther. He used transcranial magnetic stimulation to compare the brains of powerful people and non-powerful people, and he found that powerful people were less capable of "mirroring" others' actions, or imagining themselves mimicking the actions of others. When they watched a video of someone squeezing a rubber ball, the neural pathways that normally would have been firing if they had been squeezing the ball themselves did not light up strongly. In other words, they were less empathetic than the non-powerful group, whose corresponding neurons fired away.

This phenomenon goes beyond imagination.Researchled by Adam Galinsky at the Northwestern University Kellogg School of Management revealed that when instructed to draw the letter E on their forehead for others to read, people who perceived themselves as powerful were three times more likely to draw the E facing backwards for their observers.

As雷竞技手机版guest writer Brian T. Anderson wrote last April,empathyis among the most top five traits executives must exhibit to be successful. That's what faculty at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism found upon conducting interviews with business leaders around the world.

Empathetic leaders are more likely to guess how their colleagues will interpret what they say or make others feel comfortable by say, laughing when others laugh. Failure to simulate others' feelings demonstrates what Keltner calls an "empathy deficit." One idea to help explain this,put forthby Princeton psychology professor Susan T. Fiske, is that leaders do not feel the need to get on someone else's level, because the power they wield gives them access to information they would otherwise need to obtain by getting a good read on a person.

年代o what can those in power do to overcome the neurologically damaging, hubris-building potential of being at the top? Simply telling yourself to empathize won't cut it -- you have find ways to knock yourself down a peg. A February 2016 study in theJournal of Financefound that that CEOs who had lived through a natural disaster that produced a large number of fatalities were less likely to take risks.

Related:Uber's Woes Teach Us the Cost of a Work Culture Without Empathy

On the day in 2001 that PepsiCo CEO and ChairmanIndra Nooyiwas appointed to the company's board, her mother asked her to go out and pick up some milk before announcing her big news to the entire family. When she returned, her mother told her, "Leave that damn crown in the garage." To this day, Nooyi recounts that story to illustrate the importance of staying down to earth,The Atlanticreports.

年代o for leaders worried about becoming disconnected from reality or employees, customers or even loved ones -- and sustaining brain damage in the process -- remember a time when you weren't as powerful, orconnect with peoplewho aren't as powerful and empathize with their concerns.

Lydia Belanger is a former associate editor at雷竞技手机版. Follow her on Twitter:@LydiaBelanger.

Related Topics

Business News

KFC Has Been Dethroned as No. 2 Chicken Chain in the U.S. — Here's Who Took Its Spot

A viral chicken sandwich led to an increase in market share.

Business News

'We Don't Sleep Well Anymore': Airbnb Host Grapples With 'Tenant From Hell' Who Refuses to Leave

An Airbnb guest rented a guesthouse for a long-term stay in 2021 but has since remained in the unit for over 540 days — without paying rent.

Marketing

Why Clients Feel Overcharged by Marketing Agencies and How to Fix It for Good

Are marketing agencies breaking the bank without delivering the promised results? Dive into the client's dilemma as we uncover the true cost of agency services and explore strategies to bridge the gap between expectations and reality.

Business News

Drew Barrymore's Writers Are Not Returning Amid Controversy, Despite End of Strike

The new season is slated to return to air on October 16.

Business News

This State Just Replaced New York as the Country's Second Most Valuable Housing Market

A recent report by Zillow found that Florida has edged out New York as the second most valuable housing market in the U.S., while California is still No. 1.