emotional intelligence
Also known as: EI: Emotional Intelligence
Facts (17)
Sources
Parenting Styles and Their Effect on Child Development and Outcome academia.edu 7 facts
referenceAlegre (2011) examined the relationship between parenting styles and children's emotional intelligence in an article published in The Family Journal: Counseling and Therapy for Couples and Families.
referenceG. Wischerth, M. Mulvaney, M. Brackett, and D. Perkins published a study titled 'The Adverse Influence of Permissive Parenting on Personal Growth and the Mediating Role of Emotional Intelligence' in The Journal of Genetic Psychology in 2016 (Volume 177, Issue 5).
referenceSchutte et al. (1998) published 'Development and validation of a measure of emotional intelligence' in the journal Personality and Individual Differences, volume 25, issue 2, pages 167-177.
referenceAl-Elaimat, Adheisat, and Alomyan (2020) found a relationship between parenting styles and the emotional intelligence of kindergarten children, published in Early Child Development and Care.
claimG. Wischerth, M. Mulvaney, M. Brackett, and D. Perkins (2016) claim that permissive parenting has an adverse influence on personal growth and that emotional intelligence serves as a mediating role in this process.
referenceNastasa and Salab (2012) published the study 'Adolescents' emotional intelligence and parental styles' in the journal Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences, volume 33, pages 478-482.
referenceFarrell (2015) explored the relationship between parenting style and the level of emotional intelligence in preschool-aged children in a dissertation from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Investigating the impact of sleep quality on cognitive functions ... frontiersin.org 2 facts
The Role of Play in Child Development mtsinaicdc.org Apr 29, 2025 1 fact
claimPlay helps children develop emotional intelligence by allowing them to experience a range of emotions—such as joy, frustration, excitement, and disappointment—and learn how to cope with them.
The Importance of Play for Children - National Institute for Play nifplay.org 1 fact
referenceStudies by Brenner & Mueller (1982) and Hughes (1999) underscore the importance of early social interaction in play for fostering healthy relationships and emotional intelligence.
Close Encounters, Fifth Kind, Just Missed Contact | Mind Matters mindmatters.ai May 30, 2020 1 fact
claimThe science fiction short films 'Hum', 'Alientology', 'EI: Emotional Intelligence', 'Exit Strategy', 'The Secret Number', 'How To Be Human', and 'Dirty machines' are available on the DUST YouTube channel.
The Power of Play: How Fun and Games Help Children Thrive healthychildren.org May 3, 2023 1 fact
claimPhysical play, such as free play during recess, helps develop children's motor skills, prevents childhood obesity, and builds emotional intelligence.
A Survey of Incorporating Psychological Theories in LLMs - arXiv arxiv.org 1 fact
referenceSahand Sabour, Siyang Liu, Zheyuan Zhang, June Liu, Jinfeng Zhou, Alvionna Sunaryo, Tatia Lee, Rada Mihalcea, and Minlie Huang introduced 'EmoBench', a benchmark for evaluating the emotional intelligence of large language models, in a 2024 paper presented at the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics.
The Relationship Between Parenting Style, Child Behaviour and ... gavinpublishers.com 1 fact
claimThe PEMH program's 'Happy children's charter' workshop for Primary 3 to 4 students consists of four sessions focused on developing social-emotional skills like empathy, assertiveness, and emotional intelligence through interactive activities and group discussions.
Development and Play: Essential Benefits for Kids | VA commonwealthpeds.com Sep 1, 2024 1 fact
claimPlay allows children to express and regulate their emotions, helping them develop emotional intelligence and resilience to handle future challenges and stresses.
The Role of Play in Cognitive and Emotional Development longdom.org 1 fact
claimEmotional intelligence is defined as the ability to recognize, understand, and manage one's own emotions while empathizing with others, and it is a predictor of long-term success and well-being.