Embracing the Emotion in Emotional Intelligence Measurement: Insights from Emotion Theory and Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Emotion Understanding
2.1. How Definitions of Emotion Can Inform the Assessment of Emotion Understanding
2.2. Using Appraisal Theory to Asses Emotion Understanding
3. Emotion Recognition
3.1. The Dominance of Basic Emotion Theory in ERA Measurement
3.2. Going beyond a Small Set of Basic Emotions and the Forced Choice Paradigm
3.3. Going beyond Emotion Words
3.4. (Re)Defining the Scope of ERA Tests?
4. (Intrapersonal) Emotion Regulation
4.1. The Process Model of Emotion Regulation
4.2. Current Measures of Emotion Regulation
4.3. A Proposal for Future Performance Measures of Emotion Regulation
5. Emotion Management or Interpersonal Emotion Regulation
5.1. Extending the Process Model of Emotion Regulation to Interpersonal Emotion Regulation
5.2. Co-Enhancing and Co-Dampening as Adaptive and Maladaptive Emotion Management Styles
5.3. Other Strategies for Influencing People’s Emotions
5.4. Focusing on Different Preferences of the “Target”
6. Summary and Discussion
Towards a Chaos of Measures? A Glimpse into the Future of Ability EI Testing
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The MSCEIT also includes a subtest to measure emotion perception in artwork—a skill which is rarely studied in the ERA literature and will, therefore, not be discussed here. |
2 | Despite the name «emotion management» (which here we use to refer to interpersonal emotion regulation), this task deals only with intrapersonal emotion regulation. |
3 | One may argue that expert scoring and theory-based scoring should give the same results. However, we think that at least two factors could lead to differing scoring keys: (1) most likely, experts make their judgment based on multiple theories and personal expertise/experience, making it difficult to know exactly why one answer should be considered correct; this is valuable, but it is not the same as theory-driven scoring for which there is a high degree of control; (2) theory makes one specific prediction, whereas within a sample of experts, one gets a varying degree of agreement and a binary (1/0) scoring key is less defensible. |
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Emotion Understanding and Recognition | Relevant Citations |
---|---|
Incorporate knowledge about cultural differences (e.g., display rules) | (Mayer et al. 2016) |
Assess understanding/recognition of emotion blends and transitions | (Schlegel and Scherer 2018) |
Assess understanding/inferences about emotion components such as physiology or action tendencies and how they unfold in a target person | (Scherer 2009; Fontaine 2016) |
Incorporate varying contexts and differences in target person’s characteristics; assess learning of new emotion-person contingencies rather than general knowledge | (Hellwig et al. 2020) |
Use rating scales (e.g., for appraisal dimensions or for emotion labels) instead of forced choice format | (Fontaine et al. 2022) |
For emotion recognition specifically: | |
Use a wider range of emotion categories | (Cowen and Keltner 2020) |
Use multimodal and/or naturalistic emotion expressions | (Schlegel et al. 2014; Israelashvili et al. 2021) |
Incorporate social context into stimuli | (Hess and Kafetsios 2021) |
Emotion regulation and management | |
Apply strategies like the following to the regulation of own and others’ emotions; use them to create and score response options in situational judgment items: | |
| (Gross and John 2003) |
| (Olderbak et al. 2022; Xiao et al. 2022) |
| (Garnefski et al. 2001) |
| (Nelis et al. 2011) |
| (Quoidbach et al. 2010) |
| (Liu et al. 2021) |
Assess regulation ability by emotion component (e.g., ability to regulate expressions, action tendencies, appraisals) | (Fontaine 2016) |
Assess sequences of regulation strategies, e.g., combine regulation of own and management of others’ emotions in one scenario | |
Assess and compare maximal performance (“which option is the best”) and typical performance (“what would you do”) | (Schlegel and Mortillaro 2019) |
Vary effectiveness of regulation strategies by context and different needs/ preferences of the target | (Ladis et al. 2022) |
Assess behavioral adaptability (flexibility in strategy selection and application) | (Palese and Schmid Mast 2022) |
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Mortillaro, M.; Schlegel, K. Embracing the Emotion in Emotional Intelligence Measurement: Insights from Emotion Theory and Research. J. Intell. 2023, 11, 210. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11110210
Mortillaro M, Schlegel K. Embracing the Emotion in Emotional Intelligence Measurement: Insights from Emotion Theory and Research. Journal of Intelligence. 2023; 11(11):210. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11110210
Chicago/Turabian StyleMortillaro, Marcello, and Katja Schlegel. 2023. "Embracing the Emotion in Emotional Intelligence Measurement: Insights from Emotion Theory and Research" Journal of Intelligence 11, no. 11: 210. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11110210
APA StyleMortillaro, M., & Schlegel, K. (2023). Embracing the Emotion in Emotional Intelligence Measurement: Insights from Emotion Theory and Research. Journal of Intelligence, 11(11), 210. https://doi.org/10.3390/jintelligence11110210