“…Obviously, this default hypothesis lacks ecological validity and cannot truly describe the social structures underlying the relationship among team members. Simultaneously, in studies of organizational hierarchy, such as those pertaining to power disparity, status stability has also received extensive attention; however, most such studies focus have focused only on its moderating effect, such as the relationship between group status and intergroup attributes (Bettencourt, Dorr, Charlton, & Hume, 2001), status configuration and group performance (van Dijk & van Engen, 2013), group-based shame and ingroup favoritism (Shepherd et al, 2013), status differences and intergroup relationship (Saguy & Dovidio, 2013), group status and knowledge sharing behavior (Hu & Xie, 2015), self-performance expectations and promotion focus motivation (Hossain et al, 2020) and have neglected its main effect. As one of the important team characteristics, status stability will inevitably have a direct effect on team results, and is called for more attention (Chang et al, 2019).…”