×

Emotional Intelligence in Adolescents and Adults with Intellectual Disability Compared to Peers with Typical Development: Impaired, Stable or Continuous Trajectory – an Exploratory Study

Catalog # 890-664-2021| Supervised by: Prof. Batya-Hefziba Lifshitz

This work was supported by a grant from Shalem Fund

Studies examining cognitive development in intellectual disability (ID) support the Compensation Age Theory which suggests that intelligence in adults with ID peaks at age 40-45 (Lifshitz, 2020; Lifshitz-Vahav, 2015). For the first time, this study investigated emotional intelligence (EI) trajectories among adolescents (CA = 16-21) and adults (CA = 22-40) with ID (N = 55, IQ = 40-70) compared to typically developing peers (N = 54, IQ = 85-115). Three main models for EI were developed: the Abilities Model (cognitive), the Traits Model (emotional), and the Mixed Model (both dimensions). Results revealed that adults with ID demonstrated higher emotional abilities than adolescents in cognitive-based models. Furthermore, significant correlations were found between all three models in both research groups, indicating strong connections between cognitive and emotional components. The findings extend the Compensation Age Theory to EI, suggesting that cognitive maturation and life experience contribute to emotional development in the ID population.

 

Keywords: Emotional intelligence, Abilities Model, Traits Model, Mixed Model, Intellectual disability, Continuous (compensatory) Trajectory.

 

The Hebrew Full text>>

The English Abstract>>

 

 

Related items

אתר זה משתמש בקובצי Cookie ובכלים כגון Google Analytics ופיקסלים של Meta/Facebook, לצורך שיפור חוויית הגלישה, ניתוח שימוש באתר והתאמת תכנים. למידע נוסף על אופן השימוש במידע ועל זכויותיך, ניתן לעיין במסמך מדיניות הפרטיות המלאה.