Emotional intelligence
Encyclopedia : E : EM : EMO : Emotional intelligence
Emotional Intelligence, also called EI and often measured as an Emotional Intelligence Quotient or EQ, describes an ability, capacity, or skill to perceive, assess, and manage the emotions of one's self, of others, and of groups. However, being a relatively new area, the definition of emotional intelligence is still in a state of flux. Some, such as John D. Mayer
In 1920, E. L. Thorndike, at Columbia University,
The term "emotional intelligence" appears to have originated with Wayne Payne
- 1 Defining emotional intelligence
- 2 Emotional intelligence
- 2.1 Mayer and Salovey and emotional intelligence
- 2.2 Goleman and emotional intelligence
- 3 Measures of Emotional Intelligence
- 3.3 Self-report measures of EI
- 3.4 Ability-based measures of EI
- 3.5 Nancy Gibbs on emotional intelligence
- 4 Criticisms
- 4.1 Self-report EI merely another measure of Personality?
- 4.2 Self-report EI - Susceptibility to Faking Good
- 5 References
- 6 See also
- 7 External links
Defining emotional intelligence
The distinction between intelligence and knowledge in the area of cognition (i.e. IQ) is very clear, where generally, psychological research demonstrates that IQ is a reliable measure of cognitive capacity, and is stable over time. In the area of emotion (i.e. EQ) that distinction between intelligence and knowledge is murky. Current definitions of EQ are inconsistent about what it measures: someEmotional intelligence
Mayer and Salovey and emotional intelligence
In the early 1990s, John D. Mayer and Peter Salovey published a series of papers on emotional intelligence.
- The capacity to accurately perceive emotions.
- The capacity to use emotions to facilitate thinking.
- The capacity to understand emotional meanings.
- The capacity to manage emotions.
Goleman and emotional intelligence
Daniel Goleman popularized his view of emotional intelligence in the 1995 best-selling book: Emotional Intelligence: Why it can matter more than IQ.
- A part of the human brain called the amygdala or reptilian brain (because it has similar functions to those of reptiles) does most of the processing of human emotional responses. These responses mostly occur automatically, as in the case of the familiar flight-or-attack response triggered by threatening situations. Humans have evolved in such a way that a neural hijack takes place that provides a quick answer to life's critical situations. This hijacking is said to happen because of raised stress levels (which affect heart rate, blood pressure, hearing problems, eye conditions, muscle tension, cholesterol levels and hormone secretion) causing the brain to start reacting to sensory information rather than concentrating on and understanding it in order to make conscious decisions.
- In humans, the reptilian brain has links with the neocortex, which can accordingly exert some control over the largely automatic responses of the reptilian brain.
- The amount of control has a genetic component; yet one can learn to control emotions to a certain degree. Most people do learn this at some point. Further, it is possible to hone the skill, achieving greater abilities to manage emotions. Therefore, Goleman believes that emotional intelligence is learnable.
- Goleman points out there is not a strong correlation between the Intelligence quotient (IQ) and success in life. While popular opinion is that IQ predicts success, there is little conclusive evidence. There is research showing IQ is linked to completion of high school, attainment of higher education, avoidance of dependence on welfare, avoidance of criminal conviction, there is not proof that IQ predicts these outcomes. In 1995 Goleman asserted that EQ is the missing link; in the last 10 years researchers have found that emotional intelligence is an important predictor of grades, promotions, health, and relationship quality.
Goleman's five emotional competencies
Goleman divides emotional intelligence into the following five emotional competencies:- The ability to identify and name one's emotional states and to understand the link between emotions, thought and action.
- The capacity to manage one's emotional states — to control emotions or to shift undesirable emotional states to more adequate ones.
- The ability to enter into emotional states (at will) associated with a drive to achieve and be successful.
- The capacity to read, be sensitive to, and influence other people's emotions.
- The ability to enter and sustain satisfactory interpersonal relationships.
Goleman observes that emotions always exist — we always feel something. Organizations of all kinds often prize "being rational", whereas they do not esteem "being emotional." But even in the most "rational" of decisions, emotions persist: how else do we decide which criteria to use for evaluating the options in making a decision? — pace experience and statistical probabilities. Emotions also play a role in making a final decision between equally good choices — pace random chance. Goleman also laments gender role idiosyncrasies: Western society usually sees it as acceptable for women to show their emotions, but not for men.
Measures of Emotional Intelligence
Some researchers believe EI is a cognitive ability just as is IQ (eg, Mayer & Salovey, 2000), while others believe it is a combination of perceived abilities and traits (e.g., Schutte et al. 1998; Bar-On, 1997). These opposing views have inspired two separate domains of inventories – ability-based measures, which focus on maximal performance, and mixed-model measures, which focus on typical performance (Mayer, Salovey, & Caruso, 2000; Petrides & Furnham, 2000). Maximal performance is an indication of the best cognitive performance a test-taker can achieve on a test, while typical performance indicates a test-taker’s performance under ordinary test conditions (Dennis, Sternberg, & Beatty, 2000).Self-report measures of EI
The Emotional Intelligence Appraisal by Bradberry and Greaves- Personal competence, including:
- *Self-awareness: Only when somebody is aware of their strengths and weaknesses can they maximise their potential.
- *Self-management: Using awareness of your emotions to manage your response to different situations and people.
- Social competence, including:
- *Social awareness: Understanding the perspectives of other people including their motivations, their emotions, and the meaning of what they do and say.
- *Relationship management: Using awareness of one's own emotions and the emotions of others to manage relationships to a successful outcome.
Tett, Fox, and Wang
Ability-based measures of EI
The MSCEIT measure is a measure of EI involving a series of emotion-based problem solving items with relatively low face-validity, of which the answers have been deemed correct by consensus (MacCann, Roberts, Matthews, & Zeidner, 2004; Roberts, Zeidner, & Matthews, 2001). The MSCEIT purports to measure emotional intelligence across the following domains:
- Experiential Area
- #Perceiving Emotions Branch
- #Facilitating Thinking Branch
- Strategic Area
- #Understanding Emotional Meaning Branch
- #Managing Emotions Branch
Nancy Gibbs on emotional intelligence
In October of 1995, Nancy Gibbs
John D. Mayer criticized Gibb's article on his Web site
Criticisms
A significant criticism is that emotional intelligence has no "benchmark" to set itself against. While IQ tests are designed to correlate as closely as possible with school grades, emotional intelligence seems to have no similar objective quantity it can be based on.
The criticism of the works of Mayer and Salovey include a study by Roberts et.al.
Goleman's work is also criticized in the psychological community. Eysenck (
Self-report EI merely another measure of Personality?
Some researchers have raised concerns with the extent to which self-report EI measures correlate with established personality dimensions such as those within the Big Five (Gignac, 2005; Malouff, Thorsteinsson, & Schutte, 2005). Generally, self-report EI measures and personality measures have been said to converge because they both purport to measure traits, and because they are both measured in the self-report form (Zeidner, Matthews, & Roberts, 2002). Specifically, there appear to be two dimensions of the Big Five that stand out as most related to self-report EI – neuroticism and extraversion. In particular, neuroticism has been said to relate to negative emotionality and anxiety (Costa & McCrae, 1992). Intuitively, individuals scoring high on neuroticism are likely to score low on self-report EI measures (Zeidner, Matthews, & Roberts, 2002). While many studies have looked at the relationship between neuroticism and self-report EI measures, few have examined that relationship with the TMMS (Trait Meta Mood Scale) and SEI (Schutte EI Scale) specifically (Gignac, Palmer, Manocha, & Stough, in press). A study by Davies, Stankov, and Roberts (1998) reported a strong negative correlation between total TMMS scores and neuroticism scores (r = -.40). Another study by Warrick and Nettlebeck (2004) reported a moderate negative correlation between neuroticism and the TMMS total score (-.27), although there was a notable limitation in their sample size (n = 84). As for the SEI, an initial study by Schutte et al. (1998) reported a moderate negative correlation between neuroticism and total SEI scores (r = -.28), although the sample size was also notably small (n = 23). In a larger study (n = 354) by Saklofske (2003), the SEI optimism subscale was reported to have a strong negative relationship with neuroticism (r = -.52). Collectively, there does appear to be evidence of an overlap between neuroticism and self-report EI measures such as the TMMS and SEI. However, it is unclear in the literature exactly what level of correlation between personality and self-report EI is so high as to suggest that it self-report EI is redundant.
The interpretations of moderate-to-high correlations between self-report EI and personality have been varied and inconsistent. Some researchers have asserted that correlations in the .40 range constitute outright construct redundancy (eg, Davies, Stankov & Roberts, 1998), while others have suggested that self-report EI is a personality trait in itself (eg, Petrides & Furnham, 2001). Gignac (2005) asserted that it would be difficult for any self-report individual difference measure to demonstrate exceptional incremental validity above and beyond the Big Five, and recommended that factor analytic methodology be used to test for construct redundancy (as opposed to zero-order correlations). Before conclusive and convincing arguments can be asserted as to whether self-report EI is redundant or related to personality, it would be useful to statistically extricate the effects of neuroticism from the relationship between the TMMS and SEI, and determine whether the EI subscales still form a general factor (EI g) after the extrication. While the overlap between EI and personality is a large concern, there are other factors that bring the psychometric properties of self-report EI inventories into question.
Self-report EI - Susceptibility to Faking Good
Self-report EI measures, much like personality measures, are comprised of highly face-valid items. This may make understanding what test items are ‘really asking’ routinely easy, and could expose the inventories to a phenomenon known as “faking good.” More formally termed socially desirable responding (SDR), “faking good” is defined as a response pattern where test-takers systematically represent themselves with an excessive positive bias (Paulhus, 2002). This bias has long been known to contaminate responses on personality inventories (Holtgraves, 2004; McFarland & Ryan, 2000; Peebles & Moore, 1998; Nichols & Greene, 1997; Zerbe & Paulhus, 1987), and act as a mediator of the relationships between self-report measures (Nichols & Greene, 1997; Ganster et al., 1983).
It has been suggested that responding in a desirable way is a response set, which is a situational and temporary response pattern (Pauls & Crost, 2004; Paulhus, 1991). This is contrasted with a response style, which is a more long-term trait-like quality. Considering the contexts certain self-report EI inventories are used in (eg, employment settings), the problems of response sets in high-stakes scenarios become clear (Paulhus & Reid, 2001). Highlighting the extent to which response biases are considered a confound to accurate personality measurement, some researchers even believe it is necessary to warn test-takers not to fake good before taking a personality test (e.g., McFarland, 2003). In summary, given the inherent similarities between personality testing and self-report EI testing (both are self-report, both measure traits, and both are said to converge moderately-to-highly), it may be reasonable to assert that socially desirable responding has the capacity to contaminate responses on self-report EI measures. Specifically, should self-report EI measures be largely contaminated by SDR, their construct validity may be compromised (Cronbach & Meehl, 1996).
References
- Bar-On, R. (1997). Development of the Bar-On EQ-i: A measure of emotional intelligence and social intelligence. Toronto: Multi-Health Systems.
- Beasley, K. (1987) "The Emotional Quotient." Mensa (The British Mensa Magazine. Wolverhampton, United Kingdom: The British Mensa Society. May. (See http://www.pintados.co.uk/keith/iq_eq.htm downloaded October 30, 2005).
- Bradberry, T. and Greaves, J. (2005). ["The Emotional Intelligence Quickbook."], New York: Simon and Schuster. www.eiquickbook.com
- Ciarrochi, H. and Mayer, J. (2005). "Can Self-Report Measures Contribute to the Study of Emotional Intelligence? A Conversation between Joseph Ciarrochi and John D. Mayer" The University of New Hampshire. Web reference at [http://www.unh.edu/emotional_intelligence/ei%20Controversies/ei%20can%20self%20report%20contribute.htm] accessed January 2, 2006.
- Eysenck, H. (2000). Intelligence: A New Look, Transaction Publishers, (ISBN 0-7658-0707-6), pp. 109-110.
- Gardner, H. (1975) The Shattered Mind. New York: Knopf.
- Gibbs, Nancy (1995). "The EQ Factor," Time Magazine (October 2). Web reference at [http://www.time.com/time/classroom/psych/unit5_article1.html] accessed January 2, 2006. [link]
- Goleman, D. (1995). Emotional Intelligence: why it can matter more than IQ. New York: Bantam Books. (ISBN 0553375067)
- MacCann, C., Roberts, R.D., Matthews, G., & Zeidner, M. (2004). Consensus scoring and empirical option weighting of performance-based emotional intelligence tests. Personality & Individual Differences, 36, 645-662.
- Mayer, J. (2005a). "Can Emotional Knowledge be Improved? Can you raise emotional intelligence?” The University of New Hampshire. Web reference at [http://www.unh.edu/emotional_intelligence/ei%20Improve/ei%20Rasing%20EI.htm]accessed January 2, 2006.
- Mayer, J. (2005b) "Emotional Intelligence Information: A Site Dedicated to Communicating Scientific Information about Emotional Intelligence, Including Relevant Aspects of Emotions, Cognition, and Personality." The University of New Hampshire. Web reference at [http://www.unh.edu/emotional_intelligence/index.html] accessed January 2, 2006.
- Mayer, J. (2005c). "Is EI the Best Predictor of Success in Life?" The University of New Hampshire. Web reference at [http://www.unh.edu/emotional_intelligence/ei%20Controversies/eicontroversy1%20best%20predictor.htm] accessed January 2, 2006.
- Mayer, J. (2005c). "How Do You Measure Emotional Intelligence?" The University of New Hampshire. Web reference at [link] accessed January 2, 2006.
- Mayer, J.D. & Salovey, P. (1993). The intelligence of emotional intelligence. Intelligence, 17, 433-442.
- Mayer, J., Salovey, P., Caruso, D.R., and Sitarenios, G. (2001) "Emotional intelligence as a standard intelligence." Emotion, 1, 232-242.
- Payne, W.L. (1985). A study of emotion: developing emotional intelligence; self-integration; relating to fear, pain and desire (theory, structure of reality, problem-solving, contraction/expansion, tuning in/comingout/letting go). A Doctoral Dissertation. Cincinnati, OH: The Union For Experimenting Colleges And Universities (now The Union Institute).
- Roberts, R.D., Zeidner, M., and Matthews, G. (2001). "Does Emotional Intelligence Meet Traditional Standards for an Intelligence? Some New Data and Conclusions." Emotion, Vol 1, no 3, pages 196-231. Web pre-publication version available at [http://eqi.org/ei_abs4.htm] accessed January 2. 2006.
- Salovey, P. and Mayer, J.D. (1990). "Emotional intelligence." Imagination, Cognition, and Personality, 9(1990), 185-211.
- Schutte, N.S., Malouff, J.M., Hall, L.E., Haggerty, D.J., Cooper, J.T., Golden, C.J., & Dornheim, L. (1998). Development and validation of a measure of emotional intelligence. Personality and Individual Differences, 25, 167-177.
- Smith, M. K. (2002) "Howard Gardner and multiple intelligences," the encyclopedia of informal education, Downloaded from http://www.infed.org/thinkers/gardner.htm on October 31, 2005.
- Stein, S and Book, H. "The EQ Edge". Toronto: Jossey-Bass. [EQ Edge.com]
- Stein, S (1998). EQ, not just IQ, may be key to high-tech career success. [website]
- Stein, S (1999). Americans Have Higher Emotional Intelligence Than Canadians. [website]
- Stein, S (1997). Emotional Intelligence (EQ) Gets Better with Age. [link]
- Stein, S (1997). Men and Women Have Different Kinds and Levels of Emotional Intelligence, EQ for Both Sexes is Key to Workplace Success. [website]
- Technical Brochures regarding the psychometric properties of the BOEI (Benchmark of Emotional Intelligence), EQ-i, and MSCEIT. [website]
- Tett, R. P., Fox, K. E., & Wang, A. (2005). Development and validation of a self-report measure of emotional intelligence as a multidimensional trait domain. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 31, 859-888.
- Thorndike, R.K. (1920). "Intelligence and Its Uses," Harper's Magazine 140, 227-335.
- Warneka, T. (2006). Leading People the Black Belt Way: Conquering the Five Core Problems Facing Leaders Today. Asogomi Press. Cleveland, Ohio. [website]
See also
- Emotion work, List of emotions
- Emotional competence, Intercultural competence
- Empathy
- Theory of multiple intelligences, Social IQ, Systems intelligence
- Motivation
- Emotion in animals
External links
- [Emotional Intelligence] Information from John Mayer's University of New Hampshire Web site
- [Peter Salovey, Yale Psychology Faculty]
- [eq.org] Directory of emotional intelligence sites
- [Bullying and emotional intelligence]
- [Time Magazine Report: The EQ Factor]
- [Emotional Intelligence Consortium], consortium founded by Daniel Goleman
- [Multi-Health Systems], publishers of the EQ-i and the MSCEIT
- [TalentSmart], publishers of The Emotional Intelligence Appraisal
- [Edutopia: Overview on Emotional Intelligence]
- [Introduction to Emotional Intelligence Education]
- [Review of EI Literature] March 2004
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