What You are Feeling and Why: Two Distinct Types of Emotional Clarity.

Individual difference approaches have typically treated emotional clarity (i.e., one's understanding of one's own emotions) as a unitary construct. Based on strong theoretical reasons, in this study we explored two related aspects of emotional clarity in a student sample. The first, type awareness, refers to the extent to which people typically can identify and distinguish the types of emotions they experience. The second, source awareness, refers to the extent to which people typically know the causes of their emotions. We psychometrically distinguished self-report items of source and type awareness. Items measuring type awareness were obtained from traditional measures of the construct, clarity of emotions. As no existing measures assess individual differences in source awareness, we developed a set of items with strong face validity. Our results provide initial evidence that one can measure source and type awareness separately.

[1]  G J Taylor,et al.  The Twenty-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale--II. Convergent, discriminant, and concurrent validity. , 1994, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[2]  Peter W Thomas,et al.  Development of an emotional processing scale. , 2007, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[3]  H. Berenbaum,et al.  The potentially adaptive features of peculiar beliefs , 2004 .

[4]  J. Mayer,et al.  Convergent, Discriminant, and Incremental Validity of Competing Measures of Emotional Intelligence , 2003, Personality & social psychology bulletin.

[5]  Karen Gasper,et al.  The persistent use of negative affect by anxious individuals to estimate risk. , 1998, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[6]  P. Salovey,et al.  Emotional Intelligence , 1990, Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences.

[7]  Karen Gasper,et al.  Do You have to Pay Attention to Your Feelings to be Influenced by Them? , 2000 .

[8]  E. Higgins,et al.  Handbook of motivation and cognition : foundations of social behavior , 1991 .

[9]  J. Russell Core affect and the psychological construction of emotion. , 2003, Psychological review.

[10]  I. Borg,et al.  Facet Theory: Form and Content , 1995 .

[11]  James W. Pennebaker,et al.  Emotion, Disclosure, and Health , 1995 .

[12]  R. Bagby,et al.  The twenty-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale--I. Item selection and cross-validation of the factor structure. , 1994, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[13]  Patrick J. F. Groenen,et al.  Modern Multidimensional Scaling: Theory and Applications , 2003 .

[14]  H. Berenbaum,et al.  Measuring Clarity of and Attention to Emotions , 2009, Journal of personality assessment.

[15]  G. Clore,et al.  Four latent traits of emotional experience and their involvement in well-being, coping, and attributional style , 2002 .

[16]  G. Clore,et al.  Individual Differences in Emotional Experience: Mapping Available Scales to Processes , 2000 .

[17]  Dacher Kehner,et al.  The Influence of Attributions on the Relevance of Negative Feelings to Personal Satisfaction , 1993 .

[18]  G. Clore,et al.  Mood, misattribution, and judgments of well-being: Informative and directive functions of affective states. , 1983 .

[19]  T. Oltmanns,et al.  Regional analysis of self-reported personality disorder criteria. , 2008, Journal of personality.

[20]  A. Manstead,et al.  Emotions and beliefs: how feelings influence thoughts , 2000 .

[21]  A. Fenigstein,et al.  Paranoia and self-consciousness. , 1992, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[22]  H. Berenbaum,et al.  The Bidirectional Relations between Affect and Belief , 2010 .

[23]  Timothy D. Wilson,et al.  Affective Forecasting , 2005 .

[24]  Robert C. MacCallum,et al.  Relations between factor analysis and multidimensional scaling. , 1974 .

[25]  P. Bentler,et al.  Comparative fit indexes in structural models. , 1990, Psychological bulletin.

[26]  M. Goldman,et al.  Alcohol expectancies: integrating cognitive science and psychometric approaches. , 2003, Addictive behaviors.

[27]  A. Fausto-Sterling,et al.  The Five Sexes: Why Male and Female Are Not Enough , 2009 .

[28]  H. Berenbaum,et al.  The dimensions of emotional intelligence, alexithymia, and mood awareness: Associations with personality and performance on an emotional stroop task , 2003 .

[29]  J. H. Steiger Structural Model Evaluation and Modification: An Interval Estimation Approach. , 1990, Multivariate behavioral research.

[30]  T. Palfai,et al.  Emotional attention, clarity, and repair : Exploring emotional intelligence using the Trait Meta-Mood Scale , 1995 .

[31]  Louis Guttman,et al.  A STRUCTURAL THEORY FOR INTERGROUP BELIEFS AND ACTION , 1959 .

[32]  P. Bentler,et al.  Cutoff criteria for fit indexes in covariance structure analysis : Conventional criteria versus new alternatives , 1999 .