“…It has been suggested that one way to reconcile the positive and negative behaviors associated with power is to consider moderators or boundary conditions (e.g., Guinote, ; Tost, Wade‐Benzoni, & Johnson, ). A variety of moderators have been found to shape the way people respond to power, including personality traits like moral identity (DeCelles et al, ) and narcissism (Mead, Baumeister, Stuppy, & Vohs, ), contextual factors like legitimacy (De Cremer & Van Dijk, ) and status (Fast, Halevy, & Galinsky, ), as well as other factors such as the source or stability of one's power (Lammers, Galinsky, Gordijn, & Otten, ; Tost & Johnson, ) and whether one thinks of power as a responsibility or an opportunity (Sassenberg, Ellemers, & Scheepers, ). In order to carefully consider boundary conditions for the effects of power experiences, it is important to identify categories of moderators.…”