51. Emotional intelligence and attentional bias for threat-related emotion under stress.
- Author
-
Davis SK
- Subjects
- Adaptation, Psychological, Adolescent, Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Young Adult, Attentional Bias, Emotional Intelligence, Fear, Stress, Psychological
- Abstract
Emotional intelligence (EI) can buffer potentially harmful effects of situational and chronic stressors to safeguard psychological wellbeing (e.g., Mikolajczak, Petrides, Coumans & Luminet, ), yet understanding how and when EI operates to promote adaptation remains a research priority. We explored whether EI (both trait and ability) modulated early attentional processing of threat-related emotion under conditions of stress. Using a dot probe paradigm, eye movement (fixation to emotive facial stimuli, relative to neutral) and manual reaction time data were collected from 161 adults aged 18-57 years (mean age = 25.24; SD = 8.81) exposed to either a stressful (failure task) or non-stressful (control) situation. Whilst emotion management ability and trait wellbeing corresponded to avoidance of negative emotion (angry and sad respectively), high trait sociability and emotionality related to a bias for negative emotions. With most effects not restricted to stressful conditions, it is unclear whether EI underscores 'adaptive' processing, which carries implications for school-based social and emotional learning programs., (© 2018 Scandinavian Psychological Associations and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2018
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