Theory of Constructed Emotion: Emotional vocabulary and emotional intelligence

The present work aims to study the relationship between perceived emotional intelligence, and general and emotional vocabulary. Undergraduate Psychology (N = 99) and Design (N = 44) students completed a number of tests about emotional intelligence (TMMS-21), general vocabulary (BAIRES-A), and emotio...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alejandra Daniela Calero, Nicole Rosenfeld, María Belén Jader, Débora Inés Burin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre for Resilience & Socio-Emotional Health 2023-11-01
Series:International Journal of Emotional Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/115839
Description
Summary:The present work aims to study the relationship between perceived emotional intelligence, and general and emotional vocabulary. Undergraduate Psychology (N = 99) and Design (N = 44) students completed a number of tests about emotional intelligence (TMMS-21), general vocabulary (BAIRES-A), and emotional vocabulary respectively. The predictive effect of emotional vocabulary differed across different factors of emotional intelligence (positive in attention to feelings and negative in emotion repair), while a positive association was found in psychology students with more years completed at university. Psychology students had higher emotional vocabulary than Design students. Emotional vocabulary had limited influence on emotional intelligence, contrary to the theory of Constructed Emotion.
ISSN:2073-7629