| Literature DB >> 33262561 |
Nabi Nazari1, Mark D Griffiths2.
Abstract
Emotions play a central role in scientific models of decision-making, human development, interpersonal processes, psychopathology, and well-being. The Emotional Style Questionnaire (ESQ) is a novel and multifaceted psychometric scale that assesses the dimensions of individual's emotional styles. The present study evaluated the validity and factor structure of the Persian ESQ. The original version of the ESQ was translated and back-translated into Persian, followed by a pilot study. A sample of university students and staff participated in a survey (n = 822) which included the ESQ, Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale (OASIS), World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief Version (WHOQOL-BREF), Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS), and Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS). Results showed that the Persian ESQ had very good internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha coefficient: 0.84; Composite reliability = 0.89) and adequate test-retest reliability after four weeks (intraclass coefficient, r = .71 with 95% CI [.63, .77]). The confirmatory factor analysis model fitted the data well (χ2/df = 2.86, CFI = .970, SRMR = .046, PCLOSE = .85 > .05, RMSEA = .048, 90% CI [.043, .053]). Also, measurement invariance indicated the ESQ had acceptable construct validity among different groups. As for criterion-related validity, the ESQ positively correlated with scores on the WHOQOL-BREF (r = .76) and PANAS-positive affect (r = .62), and negatively correlated with the scores on the OASIS (r = -.68), DERS (r = -.39), and PANAS-negative affect (r = -72). The findings provide evidence that the ESQ is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing healthy emotionality among Persian speaking individuals. The Persian ESQ can be used in psychological intervention and clinical research in Iran and other Persian-speaking countries. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s12144-020-01205-1. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Affective neuroscience; Emotion; Quality of life; Validation; Well-being
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262561 PMCID: PMC7690336 DOI: 10.1007/s12144-020-01205-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychol ISSN: 1046-1310
Demographic characteristics of the sample (N = 822)
| Item | Value | Test | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Categorical variables | |||
| Gender | |||
| Women | 391 (47.6) | χ2 = 1.95 | .16 |
| Man | 431 (52.4) | ||
| Marital | |||
| Single | 385 (46.8) | χ2 = 3.29 | .07 |
| In Relationship | 437 (53.2) | ||
| Continues variables | |||
| Age | 31.46 (8.74) | ||
| Outlook | 2.95 (1.48) | ||
| Resilience | 3.44 (1.57) | ||
| Social intuition | 3.66 (1.48) | ||
| Self-awareness | 3.41 (1.49) | ||
| Sensitivity context | 3.331 (1.21) | ||
| Attention | 3.57 (1.43) | ||
| healthy emotionality average | 3.39 (.69) | ||
| healthy emotionality | 81.54 (16.69) | ||
Note: n = frequency; y = years; M = mean; SD = standard deviation; ESQ = Emotional Style Questionnaire; WHOQOL-BREF=World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief Version; DERS = Difficulties In Emotion Regulation Scale; OASIS=Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale; PANAS=Positive and Negative Affect Schedule. PA = positive affect; NA = negative affect
Brief interpretation of obtained score in each dimension of the ESQ
| Dimension | High score | Low score |
|---|---|---|
| Outlook | Individuals high on this dimension are generally upbeat and good at seeing the silver lining in every cloud. | Individuals low on this dimension may experience joy, but their joys dissipate fast. They have a tendency towards gloominess and pessimism. |
| Resilience | Individuals high on this dimension can recover from setbacks and bounce back from challenges relatively easily and rapidly. | Individuals low on this dimension are slow to recover from adversity, and are often crippled by it. |
| Sensitivity to context | Individuals high on this dimension know how to modify their responses to the implicit rules and expectations that govern different social situations. | Individuals low on this dimension are at times insufficiently sensitive to the surrounding context and their behavior can be judged as inappropriate by others. |
| Social Intuition | Individuals high on this dimension are acutely sensitive to the emotional states of others. | Individuals low on this dimension, have a difficult time reading other individuals’ emotions. |
| Self-awareness | Individuals high on this dimension are conscious of their thoughts and feelings and are attuned to the messages that their body sends them. | Individuals low on this dimension are less sensitive to their internal signals and may experience confusion about the nature of their emotions. |
| Attention | Individuals high on this dimension have a sharp and clear focus. | Individuals low on this dimension get easily captured by other attention-grabbing stimuli in the environment. |
Invariance measurement (N = 822)
| Type of invariance | χ2/ | CFI | ∆CFI | TLI | ∆TLI | AIC | RMSEA 90% [CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Configural | 2.13 | .968 | – | .963 | – | 1283.14 | .034[.031,.038] |
| Gender weak (Metric) | 1.97 | .967 | .001 | .965 | .002 | 1264.55 | .034[.031,.037] |
| Gender strong (Scalar) | 1.94 | .967 | .001 | .966 | .003 | 1238.27 | .033[.030,.036] |
| Gender Strict | 1.83 | .967 | .001 | .968 | .006 | 1210.13 | .032[.029,.025] |
Note: CFI = comparative fit index; TLI = Tucker-Lewis index; RMSEA = root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA); CI = confidence interval
Item statistics
| Item Number | Dimension | Skewness | Kurtosis | Squared Multiple Correlation | Cronbach’s | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Outlook | .893 | .18 | −.32 | .785 | .825 |
| 7 | Outlook | .914 | .25 | −.60 | .794 | .827 |
| 13 | Outlook | .905 | .36 | −.70 | .811 | .827 |
| 19 | Outlook | .902 | .17 | −.88 | .775 | .829 |
| 2 | Resilience | .916 | .35 | −.88 | .735 | .825 |
| 8 | Resilience | .888 | .17 | −1.05 | .740 | .826 |
| 14 | Resilience | .913 | .31 | −1.02 | .809 | .826 |
| 20 | Resilience | .892 | .36 | −.93 | .773 | .827 |
| 3 | Social Intuition | .913 | .08 | −.78 | .556 | .832 |
| 9 | Social Intuition | .887 | .17 | −.81 | .619 | .834 |
| 15 | Social Intuition | .894 | .10 | −.93 | .672 | .833 |
| 21 | Social Intuition | .770 | .35 | −.98 | .449 | .837 |
| 4 | Self-Awareness | .811 | .02 | −.25 | .571 | .830 |
| 10 | Self-Awareness | .874 | .27 | −.39 | .731 | .831 |
| 16 | Self-Awareness | .899 | .25 | −.54 | .751 | .834 |
| 22 | Self-Awareness | .838 | .29 | −.20 | .566 | .837 |
| 5 | Sensitivity to Context | .899 | .15 | −1.12 | .650 | .831 |
| 11 | Sensitivity to Context | .904 | .16 | −.99 | .689 | .828 |
| 17 | Sensitivity to Context | .779 | .15 | −1.14 | .541 | .828 |
| 23 | Sensitivity to Context | .844 | .12 | −1.15 | .531 | .826 |
| 6 | Attention | .889 | .40 | −.65 | .652 | .830 |
| 12 | Attention | .841 | .60 | −.57 | .539 | .827 |
| 18 | Attention | .900 | .55 | −.72 | .728 | .828 |
| 24 | Attention | .863 | .59 | −.62 | .679 | .828 |
Note: Emotional Style Questionnaire is provided in the supplementary data
Correlations between the ESQ and other Measures (N = 822)
| Measure | α | Mean | SD | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95%CI | ||||||
| WHOQOL-BREF | .88 | 44.52 | 6.85 | .76** | [.72, .78] | .58 |
| DERS | .90 | 66.82 | 14.02 | −.39** | [−.45, −.33] | .16 |
| OASIS | .82 | 8.96 | 2.52 | −.68** | [−.71, −.64] | .46 |
| PANAS PA | .87 | 19.72 | 5.14 | .62** | [.58, .66] | .38 |
| PANAS NA | .89 | 24.35 | 3.98 | −.72** | [−.76, −.69] | .52 |
Note. WHOQOL-BREF=World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief Version; DERS = Difficulties In Emotion Regulation Scale; OASIS=Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale; PANAS=Positive and Negative Affect Schedule. PA = positive affect; NA = negative affect; α = Cronbach alpha coefficient; r = coefficient of determination
**Correlation is significant at the p < .01 level (2-tailed)
Validity analysis of the ESQ dimensions
| Dimension | CR | AVE | α | ω | ESQ | NA | PA | OASIS | DERS | QOL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Outlook | .90 | .92 | .74 | .94 | .94 | .54** | −.37** | .34** | −.34** | −.15** | .43** |
| Resilience | .89 | .92 | .75 | .936 | .94 | .54** | −.40** | .36** | −.37** | −.17** | .43** |
| Sensitivity to Context | .84 | .87 | .64 | .883 | .91 | .53** | −.32** | .28** | −.31** | −.20** | .32** |
| Social Intuition | .83 | .90 | .71 | .897 | .92 | .46** | −.25** | .21** | −.26** | −.17** | .29** |
| Self-awareness | .82 | .90 | .70 | .896 | .91 | .45** | −.39** | .32** | −.34** | −.25** | .37** |
| Attention | .81 | .88 | .65 | .898 | .90 | .47** | −.36** | .29** | −.34** | −.19** | .33** |
Note: CR = composite reliability; AVE = average variance extracted; MaxR(h) = McDonald construct reliability; α = Cronbach alpha coefficient; WHOQOL-BREF=World Health Organization Quality of Life Brief Version; DERS = Difficulties In Emotion Regulation Scale; OASIS=Overall Anxiety Severity and Impairment Scale; PA = positive affect; NA = negative affect;
ω = McDonald’s coefficient omega
**Correlation is significant at the p < .01 level (2-tailed)