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Measuring and Validating Emotional Intelligence as Performance or Self-Report

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Author Info
Sjöberg, Lennart () (Center for Risk Research)
Engelberg, Elisabeth () (Center for Risk Research)
Abstract

This is a study of emotional intelligence (EI). EI was measured by performance and self-report tasks. Data were also obtained on basic values, some standard personality dimensions such as those specified in the five-factor model, social adjustment and several scales of impression management. Criteria were loneliness, work-family life balance and Internet addiction, and also measures of emotional and value deviance. Participants were college students in a business education program who participated anonymously in the extensive test session, which took about six hours to complete. It was found that EI measures - both self-report and performance - intercorrelated as expected, and that EI was strongly related as expected to criteria. People high in EI reported less loneliness, less Internet addiction and better work/studies - leisure/family balance. Impression management was more strongly related to self-report data than to performance. Self-report data were to a large extent accounted for by measures of personality according to the five-factor model, but performance measures were not. Finally, the extent of faking was measured and controlled for.

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Publisher Info
Paper provided by Stockholm School of Economics in its series Working Paper Series in Business Administration with number 2004:3.

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Length: 28 pages
Date of creation: 07 Feb 2004
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Handle: RePEc:hhb:hastba:2004_003

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Keywords: emotional intelligence personality five-factor model and impression management

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This paper has been announced in the following NEP Reports: References listed on IDEAS
Please report citation or reference errors to , or , if you are the registered author of the cited work, log in to your RePEc Author Service profile, click on "citations" and make appropriate adjustments.:
  1. Engelberg, Elisabeth, 2001. "Being Emotionally Intelligent: A Matter of Regulating Affect?," Working Paper Series in Business Administration 2001:14, Stockholm School of Economics.
  2. Sjöberg, Lennart, 2001. "Emotional Intelligence Measured in a Highly Competitive Testing Situation," Working Paper Series in Business Administration 2001:13, Stockholm School of Economics, revised 04 Dec 2001. [Downloadable!]
  3. Lee Cronbach, 1951. "Coefficient alpha and the internal structure of tests," Psychometrika, Springer, vol. 16(3), pages 297-334, September. [Downloadable!] (restricted)
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