Emotional intelligence, personality, and task-induced stress. |
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Authors: | Matthews, Gerald Emo, Amanda K. Funke, Gregory Zeidner, Moshe Roberts, Richard D. Costa, Paul T., Jr. Schulze, Ralf |
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Abstract: | Emotional intelligence (EI) may predict stress responses and coping strategies in a variety of applied settings. This study compares EI and the personality factors of the Five Factor Model (FFM) as predictors of task-induced stress responses. Participants (N = 200) were randomly assigned to 1 of 4 task conditions, 3 of which were designed to be stressful. Results confirmed that low EI was related to worry states and avoidance coping, even with the FFM statistically controlled. However, EI was not specifically related to task-induced changes in stress state. Results also confirmed that Neuroticism related to distress, worry, and emotion-focused coping, and Conscientiousness predicted use of task-focused coping. The applied utility of EI and personality measures is discussed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | emotional intelligence stress personality mood performance coping Five Factor Model stress responses |
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