Title: Are emotions universal or contingent?
1Are emotions universal or contingent?
2Como vai? How are your? Comment allez-vous ?
3(No Transcript)
4Are there cultural differences on the MSCEIT
scores across French (individualists) and
Pakistani (collectivists)?Study conducted by
Karim Jahanvasch (2009)
- Cultural differences Gert Hofstede
- Emotions
- The MSCEIT Test
- Results of the research
5Intercultural Differences
- Culture's Consequences, Comparing Values,
Behaviors, Institutions, and Organizations Across
Nations. - Geert Hofstede, 2001
- Collectivism vs. Individualism
- Small vs. Large Power Distance
- Weak vs. Strong Uncertainty Avoidance
- Femininity vs. Masculinity
- Long term orientation vs Short
6(No Transcript)
7Brazil Vs France
8Brazil Vs Denmark
9Emotions
- Emotions are our feelings. Literally.
- We feel them in our bodies as tingles, hot spots
and muscular tension. Our muscles tense or relax.
Our blood vessels dilate or contract. When we
feel emotionally, we also feel physically. - Our emotions can thus make us feel uncomfortable
or comfortable, sending us signals to do
something urgently or to stay in our comfortable
state.
10Emotions
- Emotions of wanting greed, hope, envy, desire,
love - Emotions of not wanting fear, shame, repulsion,
contentment - Emotions of having happiness, pride, guilt,
jealousy - Emotions of not having anger, sadness, distress
- Other emotions surprise
11Emotions
- Our emotions are perhaps the greatest potential
source of uniting all members of the human
species. - Emotions, on the one hand, are universal
- But, on the other hand, their EXPRESSION is
cultural
Beliefs divide us. Emotions unite us
12Emotions
- Emotions are our most reliable indicators of how
things are going on in our lives - We cannot change our emotions. We cannot control
them. - But we can manage them.
- Manage your emotions, or your emotions will
manage you.
13Emotions
- In any interpersonal relationship emotions and
feelings do play a big role. - Often we are not very conscious of these feelings
and in intercultural encounters interpreting
different feelings and emotions becomes even more
challenging.
We need to develop our Emotional Intelligence (EI)
14MSCEIT
Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test
John (Jack) D. Mayer
Peter Salovey
David R. Caruso
15MSCEIT
- Perceiving Emotions - the ability to recognize
how you and those around you are feeling - Using Emotions - the ability to generate emotion,
and then use this emotion in tasks (creativity,
conflicts) - Understanding Emotions - the ability to
understand complex emotions and emotional
"chains", how emotions transition from one stage
to another - Managing Emotions - the ability which allows you
to manage emotions in your self and in others, to
develop interlligent strategies to achieve
outcomes..
16MSCEIT
Measure of ones emotional ability ones
capacity to reason with emotional content and to
use the emotional content to enhance thought.
17MSCEIT
Factors 1 - Perceiving emotions Accurately
identify emotions in people and objects
Faces identify subtle emotions in faces
Pictures identify emotions in complex
landscapes and designs
18MSCEIT
Factors 2 - Using emotions Generate an emotion
and solve problems with that emotion
Facilitation knowledge of how moods impact
thinking
Sensations relate various feeling sensations to
emotions
19MSCEIT
Factors 3 - Understanding emotions Understanding
the cause of emotions
Changes Multiple choice questions about how
emotions changes over time
Blends multiple choice emotion vocabulary
definitions
20MSCEIT
Factors 4 - Managing emotions Stay open to
emotions and blend with thinking
Emotion Management indicate effectivness of
various solutions to internal problems
Emotional Relations indicate effectivness of
various solutions to problems involving other
poeple
21MSCEIT
Factors
- Perceiving emotions
- Using emotions
- Understanding emotions
- Managing emotions
Experiential EI
Hierarchy from more basic to more
psychologically complex
Strategic EI
22Study conducted by Karim Jahanvasch (2009)
Study
Emotions at an international level comparison of
MSCEIT results in France and Pakistan
23Study
- Are there cultural differences on the MSCEIT
scores across individualistic and collectivistic
cultures? - Individualism-collectivism is a major dimension
of cultural variable (Hofstede, 1980) - This dimension of culture exists across a wide
range of emotion-related abilities that
essentially comprise the construct of emotional
ability (Matsumoto, 1992 Fernandez et al. 2000
Gross et al. 2003). - Based on this literature, people from
individualistic cultures are better in
recognizing, understanding, expressing, and
regulating their emotions.
24Study
Individualistic country France (ranks 71)
Sample 111 students of the University in
Aix-en-Provence (62 females)
Collectivistic country Pakistan (ranks 14)
Sample 81 students of the University in
Balochistan (29 females)
- Both samples
- Students from management schools
- Average age 29,5 (SD 8,5)
- Good command of English
25Results of the study
Study
- There are several significant crosscultural
differences - Factorial invariance of MSCEIT accross cultures
gt MSCEIT across both cultures can be interpreted
in the same way (emotional factors are universal,
it is their manifestation that differs across
cultures) - French (individualistic culture) performed better
that their Pakistani (collectivistic culture)
counterparts in the four dimensions of the
emotional ability measured by MSCEIT - Independent sample t tests on MSCEIT dimensions
perceiving emotions (t2,39, plt0,05, Cohens
d0,35) using emotions (t2,06, plt0,05, Cohens
d0,30), understanding emotions (t6,24, plt0,001,
Cohens d0,92), and managing emotions (t5,05,
plt0,001, Cohens d0,75)
26Limitations of the study
Study
- Sample limitations
- The sample at a single university may not reflect
the culture of a heterogeneous nation - Students may experience different levels of
emotional ability from a general working adult
population (Day et al. 2005).
27- Avez-vous des questions ?
- Any question?
- Alguma pergunta?