What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health
Sorting out the scientific facts from the unsupported hype about emotional intelligence.

Emotional intelligence (or EI)—the ability to perceive, regulate, and communicate emotions, to understand emotions in ourselves and others—has been the subject of best-selling books, magazine cover stories, and countless media mentions. It has been touted as a solution for problems ranging from relationship issues to the inadequacies of local schools. But the media hype has far outpaced the scientific research on emotional intelligence. In What We Know about Emotional Intelligence, three experts who are actively involved in research into EI offer a state-of-the-art account of EI in theory and practice. They tell us what we know about EI based not on anecdote or wishful thinking but on science.

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence looks at current knowledge about EI with the goal of translating it into practical recommendations in work, school, social, and psychological contexts.

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What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health
Sorting out the scientific facts from the unsupported hype about emotional intelligence.

Emotional intelligence (or EI)—the ability to perceive, regulate, and communicate emotions, to understand emotions in ourselves and others—has been the subject of best-selling books, magazine cover stories, and countless media mentions. It has been touted as a solution for problems ranging from relationship issues to the inadequacies of local schools. But the media hype has far outpaced the scientific research on emotional intelligence. In What We Know about Emotional Intelligence, three experts who are actively involved in research into EI offer a state-of-the-art account of EI in theory and practice. They tell us what we know about EI based not on anecdote or wishful thinking but on science.

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence looks at current knowledge about EI with the goal of translating it into practical recommendations in work, school, social, and psychological contexts.

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What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence: How It Affects Learning, Work, Relationships, and Our Mental Health

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Overview

Sorting out the scientific facts from the unsupported hype about emotional intelligence.

Emotional intelligence (or EI)—the ability to perceive, regulate, and communicate emotions, to understand emotions in ourselves and others—has been the subject of best-selling books, magazine cover stories, and countless media mentions. It has been touted as a solution for problems ranging from relationship issues to the inadequacies of local schools. But the media hype has far outpaced the scientific research on emotional intelligence. In What We Know about Emotional Intelligence, three experts who are actively involved in research into EI offer a state-of-the-art account of EI in theory and practice. They tell us what we know about EI based not on anecdote or wishful thinking but on science.

What We Know about Emotional Intelligence looks at current knowledge about EI with the goal of translating it into practical recommendations in work, school, social, and psychological contexts.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780262291613
Publisher: MIT Press
Publication date: 02/10/2012
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 462
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Moshe Zeidner is Professor of Educational Psychology and Human Development at the University of Haifa.

Gerald Matthews is Professor of Psychology at the University of Cincinnati.

Richard D. Roberts is Principal Research Scientist at the Center for New Constructs, Educational Testing Service.

What People are Saying About This

Endorsement

Despite all its detractors, it seems emotional intelligence is here to stay. Zeidner, Roberts, and Matthews have done a fantastic job of pulling together all facets of EI - the good and the bad - and presenting them in a single readable volume.

Neal Ashkanasy, University of Queensland Business School, Australia, and co-author of Managing Emotions in the Workplace

From the Publisher

Despite all its detractors, it seems emotional intelligence is here to stay. Zeidner, Roberts, and Matthews have done a fantastic job of pulling together all facets of EI - the good and the bad - and presenting them in a single readable volume.

Neal Ashkanasy, University of Queensland Business School, Australia, and co-author of Managing Emotions in the Workplace

Neal Ashkanasy

Despite all its detractors, it seems emotional intelligence is here to stay. Zeidner, Roberts, and Matthews have done a fantastic job of pulling together all facets of EI - the good and the bad - and presenting them in a single readable volume.

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