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Emotional intelligence: An integrative meta-analysis and cascading model.

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TLDR
The authors specify a progressive (cascading) pattern among ability-based EI facets, in which emotion perception must causally precede emotion understanding, which in turn precedes conscious emotion regulation and job performance.
Abstract
Research and valid practice in emotional intelligence (EI) have been impeded by lack of theoretical clarity regarding (a) the relative roles of emotion perception, emotion understanding, and emotion regulation facets in explaining job performance; (b) conceptual redundancy of EI with cognitive intelligence and Big Five personality; and (c) application of the EI label to 2 distinct sets of constructs (i.e., ability-based EI and mixed-based EI). In the current article, the authors propose and then test a theoretical model that integrates these factors. They specify a progressive (cascading) pattern among ability-based EI facets, in which emotion perception must causally precede emotion understanding, which in turn precedes conscious emotion regulation and job performance. The sequential elements in this progressive model are believed to selectively reflect Conscientiousness, cognitive ability, and Neuroticism, respectively. "Mixed-based" measures of EI are expected to explain variance in job performance beyond cognitive ability and personality. The cascading model of EI is empirically confirmed via meta-analytic data, although relationships between ability-based EI and job performance are shown to be inconsistent (i.e., EI positively predicts performance for high emotional labor jobs and negatively predicts performance for low emotional labor jobs). Gender and race differences in EI are also meta-analyzed. Implications for linking the EI fad in personnel selection to established psychological theory are discussed.

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Citations
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Emotion and Adaptation

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The relation between emotional intelligence and job performance: A meta‐analysis

TL;DR: Humphrey et al. as mentioned in this paper performed a meta-analysis on the relationship between emotional intelligence and job performance, and found that emotional intelligence was correlated with cognitive ability and with neuroticism, extraversion, openness, agreeableness and conscientiousness.
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Emotion Regulation and Psychopathology: The Role of Gender

TL;DR: This review addresses three questions regarding the relationships among gender, emotion regulation, and psychopathology: are there gender differences in emotion regulation strategies, are emotionregulation strategies similarly related to psychopathology in men and women, and do gender differences to account for gender differences for psychopathology.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ability Model of Emotional Intelligence: Principles and Updates:

TL;DR: The authors present seven principles that have guided our thinking about emotional intelligence, some of them new, and reformulated our original ability model here guided by these principles, and present a new ability model based on these principles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gender differences in narcissism: A meta-analytic review.

TL;DR: Investigation of gender differences in three facets of the Narcissistic Personality Inventory revealed that observed gender differences were not explained by measurement bias and thus can be interpreted as true sex differences.
References
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Revisiting the predictive validity of emotional intelligence: self-report versus ability-based measures

TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between emotional intelligence (EI) and academic achievement in college students, using both self-report and ability-based measures of EI, and found that EI is not a strong predictor of academic achievement regardless of the type of instrument used to measure it.
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Emotional Reactivity to Everyday Problems, Affective Inertia, and Neuroticism

TL;DR: In this paper, a naturalistic diary recording study was conducted to assess affective responses to everyday stress and found that persons scoring high in neuroticism were more reactive to stressors and were more distressed by recurrent problems than were persons scoring low in neurotic.
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Emotional intelligence, Machiavellianism and emotional manipulation: Does EI have a dark side?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the associations of Machiavellianism with self-report and performance emotional intelligence (EI) and with personality and found that high Machs endorse emotionally-manipulative behaviour, although the extent to which they are successful in this behaviour, given the negative Mach/EI association, remains to be established.
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A New Test to Measure Emotion Recognition Ability: Matsumoto and Ekman's Japanese and Caucasian Brief Affect Recognition Test (JACBART)

TL;DR: The Japanese and Caucasian Brief Affect Recognition Test (JACBART) as discussed by the authors is a test designed to measure individual differences in emotion recognition ability (ERA), five studies examined the reliability and validity of the scores produced using this test, and the first evidence for a correlation between ERA measured by a standardized test and personality.
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Measurement of trait emotional intelligence: testing and cross-validating a modified version of Schutte et al.'s (1998) measure

TL;DR: This article investigated the effect on the scale's psychometric properties of reversing some items and adding some new items and found that the use of item reversals and additional items did not improve the EI scale's internal reliability.
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