Emotion Recognition Accuracy (ERA) is vital for social functioning and social relationships, yet empirical support for a positive link with well-being has been sparse. In three studies, we show that the Assessment of Contextualized Emotions (ACE) which distinguishes between accurately perceiving intended emotions and bias due to perceiving additional, secondary emotions, consistently predicted personal and social well-being. Across thirteen world cultures, accuracy was associated with higher well-being and life satisfaction, and bias linked to loneliness. A social interaction study in Czech Republic found accuracy (bias) was positively (negatively) associated with social well-being. The effects of accuracy and bias on well-being were partially mediated by social interaction quality in a third study. These findings further our understanding of ERA’s social functions.

Kafetsios, K., Hess, U., Dostal, D., Seitl, M., Hypsova, P., Hareli, S., et al. (2024). A contextualized emotion perception assessment relates to personal and social well-being. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PERSONALITY, 114 [10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104556].

A contextualized emotion perception assessment relates to personal and social well-being

Theodorou, Annalisa;
2024-01-01

Abstract

Emotion Recognition Accuracy (ERA) is vital for social functioning and social relationships, yet empirical support for a positive link with well-being has been sparse. In three studies, we show that the Assessment of Contextualized Emotions (ACE) which distinguishes between accurately perceiving intended emotions and bias due to perceiving additional, secondary emotions, consistently predicted personal and social well-being. Across thirteen world cultures, accuracy was associated with higher well-being and life satisfaction, and bias linked to loneliness. A social interaction study in Czech Republic found accuracy (bias) was positively (negatively) associated with social well-being. The effects of accuracy and bias on well-being were partially mediated by social interaction quality in a third study. These findings further our understanding of ERA’s social functions.
2024
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore M-PSI/05
Settore PSIC-03/A - Psicologia sociale
English
emotion perception; well-being; interpersonal interaction; multilevel analysis
The research was supported by Research grant 22-15238S to K. Kafetsios by the Czech Science Foundation and partly supported by a research Grant by the Hellenic General Secretariat for Research and Development by a Grant (KA10413) awarded to K. Kafetsios and the University of Crete. Also, the study was partially funded by a grant from the Basque Government to Research Groups (Consolidated Group ‘Culture, Cognition, and Emotion’; IT1598-22) and by a grant from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2020-115738GB-I00).
Kafetsios, K., Hess, U., Dostal, D., Seitl, M., Hypsova, P., Hareli, S., et al. (2024). A contextualized emotion perception assessment relates to personal and social well-being. JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN PERSONALITY, 114 [10.1016/j.jrp.2024.104556].
Kafetsios, K; Hess, U; Dostal, D; Seitl, M; Hypsova, P; Hareli, S; Alonso-Arbiol, I; Schütz, A; Gruda, D; Campbell, K; Chen, B; Held, Mj; Kamble, S; ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/396527
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