The ability to recognize other people’s emotions from their face, voice, and body (emotion recognition ability, ERA) is crucial to successful functioning in private and professional life. The Geneva Emotion Recognition Test (GERT; Schlegel, Grandjean, & Scherer, 2014) is a new instrument to measure ERA in a more ecologically valid way than previous tests. In this article, we report the results of five studies examining the test’s construct validity with a total N of 1,284. We found that the GERT was highly positively correlated with other performance-based tests measuring ERA and emotional intelligence (EI), as well as with cognitive intelligence. GERT scores were also related to higher self-reported empathy, openness, and neuroticism, and ...
Drawing upon multidimensional theories of intelligence, the current paper evaluates if the Geneva Em...
The ability to recognize and label emotional facial expressions is an important aspect of social cog...
Emotional Intelligence (EI) is a relatively new concept in the field of psychology, introduced by Sa...
The ability to recognize other people's emotions from their face, voice, and body (emotion recogniti...
The ability to recognize other people's emotions from their face, voice, and body (emotion recogniti...
Emotional intelligence (EI) has been frequently studied as a predictor of work criteria, but dispara...
Despite extensive research on emotional expression, there are few validated tests of individual diff...
Recent research on emotion recognition ability (ERA) suggests that the capacity to process emotional...
Individual differences in understanding other people’s emotions have typically been studied with rec...
The ability to recognize emotions from nonverbal cues (emotion recognition ability, ERA) is a core c...
Extant evidence provides no consensus on whether individuals with higher emotional intelligence (EI)...
Emotion understanding, which can broadly be defined as expertise in the meaning of emotion, is a cor...
Interpersonal emotion recognition requires the integration of nonverbal cues across a number of moda...
Emotional intelligence (EI) has gained significant popularity as a scientific construct over the pas...
Drawing upon multidimensional theories of intelligence, the current paper evaluates if the Geneva Em...
Drawing upon multidimensional theories of intelligence, the current paper evaluates if the Geneva Em...
The ability to recognize and label emotional facial expressions is an important aspect of social cog...
Emotional Intelligence (EI) is a relatively new concept in the field of psychology, introduced by Sa...
The ability to recognize other people's emotions from their face, voice, and body (emotion recogniti...
The ability to recognize other people's emotions from their face, voice, and body (emotion recogniti...
Emotional intelligence (EI) has been frequently studied as a predictor of work criteria, but dispara...
Despite extensive research on emotional expression, there are few validated tests of individual diff...
Recent research on emotion recognition ability (ERA) suggests that the capacity to process emotional...
Individual differences in understanding other people’s emotions have typically been studied with rec...
The ability to recognize emotions from nonverbal cues (emotion recognition ability, ERA) is a core c...
Extant evidence provides no consensus on whether individuals with higher emotional intelligence (EI)...
Emotion understanding, which can broadly be defined as expertise in the meaning of emotion, is a cor...
Interpersonal emotion recognition requires the integration of nonverbal cues across a number of moda...
Emotional intelligence (EI) has gained significant popularity as a scientific construct over the pas...
Drawing upon multidimensional theories of intelligence, the current paper evaluates if the Geneva Em...
Drawing upon multidimensional theories of intelligence, the current paper evaluates if the Geneva Em...
The ability to recognize and label emotional facial expressions is an important aspect of social cog...
Emotional Intelligence (EI) is a relatively new concept in the field of psychology, introduced by Sa...