Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities

Nowadays, not only psychologists are interested in the study of Emotional Intelligence (EI). Teachers, educator, managers, employers, and people, in general, pay attention to EI. For example, teachers would like to know how EI could affect student’s academic results, and managers are concerned about...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
:
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (170 p.)
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Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
Frontiers Media SA 2016
1 electronic resource (170 p.)
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Frontiers Research Topics
Nowadays, not only psychologists are interested in the study of Emotional Intelligence (EI). Teachers, educator, managers, employers, and people, in general, pay attention to EI. For example, teachers would like to know how EI could affect student’s academic results, and managers are concerned about how EI influences their employees’ performance. The concept of EI has been widely used in recent years to the extent that people start to applying it in daily life. EI is broadly defined as the capacity to process and use emotional information. More specifically, according to Mayer and Salovey, EI is the ability to: “1) accurate perception, appraise, and expression of emotion; 2) access and/or generation of feelings when they facilitate thought; 3) understand emotions and emotional knowledge; and 4) regulate emotions to promote emotional and intellectual growth” (Mayer and Salovey 1997, p. 10). When new information arises into one specific area of knowledge, the work of the scientists is to investigate the relation between this new information and other established concepts. In this sense, EI could be considered as a new framework to explain human behaviour. As a young concept in Psychology, EI could be used to elucidate the performance in the activities of everyday life. Over the past two decades, studies of EI have tried to delimitate how EI is linked to other competences. A vast number of studies have reported a relation between EI and a large list of competences such as academic and work success, life satisfaction, attendee to emotions, assertiveness, emotional expression, emotional-based decision making, impulsive control, stress management, among others. Moreover, recent researches have shown that EI plays an important role in the prediction of behaviour besides personality and cognitive factors. However, it is not until quite recently, that studies on EI have considered the importance of individual differences in EI and their interaction with cognitive abilities. The general issue of this Research Topic was to expose the role of individual differences on EI in the development of a large number of competencies that support a more efficient performance in people’s everyday life. The present Research Topic provide an extensive review that may give light to the better understanding of how individual differences in EI affect human behaviour. We have considered studies that analyse: 1) how EI contributes to emotional, cognitive and social process beyond the well-known contribution of IQ and personality traits, as well as the brain system that supports the EI; 2) how EI contributes to relationships among emotions and health and well-being, 3) the roles of EI during early development and the evaluation in different populations, 4) how implicit beliefs about emotions and EI influence emotional abilities.
English
emotion
Well-being
Intelligence
Health
Personality
cognitive abilities
creativity
Emotional Intelligence
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Fernández Berrocal, Pablo auth
language English
format eBook
author Purificacion Checa
spellingShingle Purificacion Checa
Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Purificacion Checa
Fernández Berrocal, Pablo
author_variant p c pc
author2 Fernández Berrocal, Pablo
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author_sort Purificacion Checa
title Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_full Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_fullStr Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_full_unstemmed Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_auth Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_new Emotional Intelligence and Cognitive Abilities
title_sort emotional intelligence and cognitive abilities
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2016
physical 1 electronic resource (170 p.)
isbn 2-88919-922-3
illustrated Not Illustrated
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In this sense, EI could be considered as a new framework to explain human behaviour. As a young concept in Psychology, EI could be used to elucidate the performance in the activities of everyday life. Over the past two decades, studies of EI have tried to delimitate how EI is linked to other competences. A vast number of studies have reported a relation between EI and a large list of competences such as academic and work success, life satisfaction, attendee to emotions, assertiveness, emotional expression, emotional-based decision making, impulsive control, stress management, among others. Moreover, recent researches have shown that EI plays an important role in the prediction of behaviour besides personality and cognitive factors. However, it is not until quite recently, that studies on EI have considered the importance of individual differences in EI and their interaction with cognitive abilities. 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