Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
891271 Personality and Individual Differences 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Emotional intelligence (EI) has been reliably linked to better mental health (Martins, Ramalho, & Morin, 2010), though descriptive associations reveal little about how and when such adaptive outcomes arise. Whilst there is some evidence to suggest that ‘trait’ EI may operate as a protective resource within stress–illness processes (e.g., Mikolajczak, Roy, Luminet, Fillée, & de Timary, 2007), the role of ‘ability’ EI in this regard appears unclear (e.g., Matthews et al., 2006). Moreover, few studies have simultaneously examined relations between EI, chronic stressors and mental health in adolescents. The current study explored whether EI moderated the relationship between a range of stressors (family dysfunction; negative life events; and socio-economic adversity) and self-reported mental health (depression and disruptive behaviour symptomatology) in a sample of 405 adolescents (mean age 13.09 years). Moderated regression analyses found that whilst high levels of trait EI attenuated stressor–mental health relations, high levels of ability EI amplified associations, although both effects showed specificity with respect to stressor type and disorder. Implications for the EI construct and related intervention programmes are discussed.

► Emotional intelligence (EI) may operate as a protective resource within stress–illness processes. ► Moderated regression analyses examined relations between environmental stressors, mental health and EI in youth. ► High levels of trait EI attenuated family dysfunction on disruptive behaviour. ► High levels of ability EI amplified the link between socioeconomic adversity and depression. ► EI is not universally advantageous and operates differentially in pathways to adjustment.

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