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Emotional Intelligence Chapter 4 Emotional Intelligence

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Title: Emotional Intelligence Chapter 4 Emotional Intelligence


1
Emotional Intelligence
  • Chapter 4

2
Emotional Intelligence
  • Daniel Goleman (1995)
  • IQ scores account for only about 20 of success
  • Draws from Howard Gardners interpersonal
    intelligence

3
Emotional Intelligence
  • Self-awareness
  • Ongoing attention to ones internal states
  • Foundation of emotional intelligence
  • Ability to work through negative emotions
  • Control the duration

4
Emotional Intelligence
  • Ability to regulate emotion
  • Different from suppressing emotions
  • Ability to delay gratification
  • 4 year olds and the marshmallow
  • Persistence
  • Ability to stay focused on long-term goals
  • Optimism
  • Flow being one with what you are doing
    engrossed

5
Emotional Intelligence
  • Empathy the ability to feel the emotions of
    someone else
  • Perspective-taking
  • Emotional component
  • Social competencies
  • Organize groups
  • Mediate conflict
  • Negotiate solutions
  • Make personal connections

6
What Causes Stress?
  • Stress our response to events that disturb, or
    threaten to disturb, our physical or
    psychological equilibrium
  • Stressors external or internal events that
    challenge or threaten us

7
Stressors
  • Major cataclysmic events
  • Personal major events
  • Minor stressful events, called hassles
  • Even positive events can tax bodys resources and
    cause stress.
  • negative events induce more stress than neutral
    or positive events.

8
Mind, Brain Body
  • At any moment, your brain is creatively
    performing about 400 billion actions. You are
    only conscious of around 2000.
  • Dr. Caroline Leaf
  • Who Switched Off My Brain?

9
Mind, Brain Body
  • Dr. Candace Pert
  • Brain and mind function as a single psychosomatic
    network.
  • The crucial link is emotions. Biochemical
    molecules of emotion are like photocopies of
    thought.

10
Mind, Brain Body
  • The more you think, the more you understand.
  • The more focused and aware you are, the stronger
    your memory (dendrites firmly attached).
  • During sleep, your thoughts are sorted out.
    Glial cells prune dendrites.

11
Mind, Brain Body
  • Thoughts are brain electro-chemical patterns.
  • Negative emotions are fear based.
  • Positive emotions are faith based.
  • Everything you see, hear, and feel becomes part
    of your thought life.

12
Mind, Brain Body
  • The thalamus sends an electrical message to the
    cortex and activates a memory.
  • Your limbic system is a chemical factory.
  • The amygdala is a library of emotional
    perceptions to check the memory. It may dominate
    the cortex.
  • The hippocampus will hold short-term memories for
    48-72 hours.
  • The hypothalamus translates the conclusion to a
    bodily response.

13
Mind, Brain Body
  • Emotions are cellular signals that translate
    information into physical reality.
  • The substances used include peptides, steroids,
    and neurotransmitters.
  • About 90 of this process is non-conscious and
    10 conscious.

14
Hans Selye Stress as a Set of Responses to
Demands
  • General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS) Hans Selyes
    stress model in which an event that threatens an
    organisms well-being (a stressor) leads to a
    three-stage bodily response
  • Stage 1 Alarm
  • Stage 2 Resistance
  • Stage 3 Exhaustion

15
Hans Selye Stress as a Set of Responses to
Demands
  • General adaptation syndrome (GAS)
  • Stage 1 Alarm
  • Upon encountering a stressor, body reacts with
    fight-or-flight response and sympathetic
    nervous system is activated. Hormones such as
    cortisol and adrenalin released into the
    bloodstream to meet the threat or danger. The
    bodys resources now mobilized.

16
Hans Selye Stress as a Set of Responses to
Demands
  • General adaptation syndrome (GAS)
  • Stage 2 Resistance
  • Parasympathetic nervous system returns many
    physiological functions to normal levels while
    body focuses resources against the stressor.
    Blood glucose levels remain high, cortisol and
    adrenalin continue to circulate at elevated
    levels, but outward appearance of organism seems
    normal. Body remains on red alert.

17
Hans Selye Stress as a Set of Responses to
Demands
  • General adaptation syndrome (GAS)
  • Stage 3 Exhaustion
  • If stressor continues beyond bodys capacity,
    organism exhausts resources and becomes
    susceptible to disease and death.

18
Psychophysiological (Psychosomatic) Illnesses Are
Stress Related
  • Psychophysiological disorders physical
    conditions, such as high blood pressure and
    migraine headaches, that are caused or aggravated
    by psychological factors such as stress
  • Two bodily systems have received the most
    attention.

19
Psychophysiological Illnesses Are Stress Related
  • The cardiovascular system is strongly affected by
    stress-related emotional responses
  • High blood pressure (or hypertension)
  • Instances of ischemiaheart does not receive
    sufficient blood
  • The release of cortisol from the adrenal cortex
    and epinephrine from the adrenal medulla, which
    ultimately leads to artery blockage and heart
    attacks

20
Psychophysiological Illnesses Are Stress Related
  • The immune system a complex surveillance system
    of specialized cells, tissues, and organs (the
    bodys primary defense against disease) reacts to
    and destroys cells determined not to be part of
    the body.
  • Three important types of cells in the immune
    system are B cells, T cells, and natural killer
    cells.
  • Both acute and chronic stress can reduce the
    efficiency of the immune system, making the body
    more susceptible to disease.

21
  • Coping with Stress

22
Cognitive Appraisal
  • Richard Lazarus (early researcher) Cognitive
    appraisal is essential in defining whether a
    situation is a threat, how big a threat it is,
    and what resources you have to deal with the
    threat.

23
While responding, you build your mental framework.
  • You exercise your will to accept or reject
    information (corpus callosum).
  • Accepted information is amplified.
  • Rejected information will disappear.
  • You must feel something is true to believe it.
    Emotions (limbic system) tells you what is real,
    true, and important.

24
Cognitive Appraisal
  • Lazarus identified two cognitive appraisal
    stages (notice fear vs. faith)
  • Primary appraisal initial evaluation of
    situation assess what is happening, whether it
    is threatening, and whether you should take some
    action in response to the threat
  • Secondary appraisal assess whether you have
    ability to cope with stressor. The more competent
    you perceive yourself to be, the less stress you
    experience.

25
Cognitive Appraisal
  • Lazaruss model conceives of the person as an
    active participant in evaluating and responding
    to stressors.
  • Problem-focused coping a strategy aimed at
    reducing stress by overcoming the source of the
    problem
  • Emotion-focused coping efforts to manage your
    emotional reactions to stressors rather than
    trying to change the stressors themselves

26
Predictability and Control Can Moderate the
Stress Response
  • Whether an event becomes a harmful stressor is
    often determined by
  • Its predictability
  • If you know that a stressor is coming but are
    uncertain when it will occur, you experience
    greater stress.
  • Factors related to control over it e.g., having
    faith

27
Predictability and Control Can Moderate the
Stress Response
  • If you believe that you have some control over a
    stressor, you usually feel less stressed.
  • When you doubt your ability to control a
    stressor, you are more likely to use
    emotion-focused coping.
  • Locus of control the degree to which you expect
    that outcomes in your life depend on your own
    actions rather than the environment.
  • Repeated failure at trying to eliminate stressors
    can lead to a feeling of learned helplessness.

28
Hostile Pessimistic Persons Are More Reactive
to Stressors
  • Pessimistic explanatory style
  • tendency to explain cause of negative
    uncontrollable events as ones own stable
    personal qualities affecting all aspects of life
  • Associated with health problems and premature
    death
  • Optimistic explanatory style
  • tendency to explain cause of uncontrollable
    negative events as temporary, external factors
    that do not affect other aspects of ones life
  • Associated with good health and longevity

29
These Patterns Can Be Changed
  • Deal with old issues
  • Dont deny emotions
  • Forgive
  • De-guilt (make amends forgive yourself)
  • Question beliefs and assumptions
  • Talk with somebody you trust

30
Social Support Has Therapeutic Effects
  • People with more extensive social support
    networks are happier, have stronger immune
    systems, and live longer than those who are
    socially isolated.

31
Social Support Has Therapeutic Effects
  • Common benefits of social support
  • Provides increased knowledge about the stressor
  • Associating with others often provides
    information about how to understand and
    emotionally respond to stressful events.
  • Provides opportunities to simply express our
    feelings, which can lead to physical benefits

32
Choose Your Thoughts
  • Dont unnecessarily expose yourself to negative
    thinking
  • Dont mindlessly take in information
  • Consciously decide what thoughts to accept or to
    reject
  • Consciously decide what thoughts to entertain
  • Be conscious of what you say (especially to
    yourself)

33
Relaxation Training Is Effective in Reducing
Stress
  • Many psychologists recommend relaxation training
    as an effective stress antidote.
  • The most basic relaxation technique is
    progressive relaxation, a stress-reducing
    technique involving the successive tensing and
    relaxing of each of the major muscle groups of
    the body.
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