The field of emotional intelligence (EI) research has yielded two rather distinct ways of conceptualizing and measuring the construct, which also differ greatly in terms of their scientific value: mixed models of EI, although commercially successful, prove inadequate when subject to scientific scrutiny; by contrast, the Mayer and Salovey ability model of EI meets most of the proposed criteria for establishing a scientifically meaningful EI construct. Its current operationalization, the MSCEIT, has thus far been found to exhibit good reliability, as well as convergent-dicriminant and structural validity. The present study examined the psychometric properties of the Serbian version of the test in a sample of 250 high school graduates. Our results show that the reliabilities of Serbian MSCEIT scores are equivalent to those reported for the American standardization sample; more specifically, reliability coefficients are high for the two Area scores and the Total score (r? .86). The Total EI score shows low to moderate correlations with standard measures of academic intelligence (r=.244 - .429; p
CITATION STYLE
Altaras-Dimitrijevic, A., & Jolic-Marjanovic, Z. (2010). The Mayer-Salovey-Caruso emotional intelligence test: Psychometric properties of the Serbian version. Psihologija, 43(4), 411–426. https://doi.org/10.2298/psi1004411a
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