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Title: On emotionally intelligent time travel: individual differences in affective forecasting ability. Author: Dunn EW, Brackett MA, Ashton-James C, Schneiderman E, Salovey P. Journal: Pers Soc Psychol Bull; 2007 Jan; 33(1):85-93. PubMed ID: 17178932. Abstract: In two studies, the authors examined whether people who are high in emotional intelligence (EI) make more accurate forecasts about their own affective responses to future events. All participants completed a performance measure of EI (the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test) as well as a self-report measure of EI. Affective forecasting ability was assessed using a longitudinal design in which participants were asked to predict how they would feel and report their actual feelings following three events in three different domains: politics and academics (Study 1) and sports (Study 2). Across these events, individual differences in forecasting ability were predicted by participants' scores on the performance measure, but not the self-report measure, of EI; high-EI individuals exhibited greater affective forecasting accuracy. Emotion Management, a subcomponent of EI, emerged as the strongest predictor of forecasting ability.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]