Emotional
intelligence is generally regarded as a good thing.
But
new research suggests it also has a dark side: Young women with higher
emotional intelligence are more likely to commit acts of delinquency, finds a
study recently published in the Journal of Forensic Psychiatry & Psychology.
Led
by Plymouth University's Alison Bacon, researchers asked 96 college students a
series of questions to evaluate them on a spectrum of:
- thrill-seeking tendencies
- delinquent behavior
- emotional intelligence
They
had expected that while people with thrill-seeking tendencies might also have
delinquent impulses, if these people also had high levels of emotional
intelligence, that intelligence would help them curb those impulses.
This
was true -- but only for males. Females were actually more likely to engage in
delinquent acts if they reported higher levels of emotional intelligence.
Why
might that be? Part of it may come down to the fact that, young females tend to
process their emotions differently than males and to gravitate toward different
forms of delinquency.
Troubled
young men, the researchers note, externalize their emotions and tend toward
violent acts in their delinquency -- acts that don't generally require a
sophisticated understanding of how other people think.
Young
women, on the other hand, tend to internalize negative emotions and may be
channeling this energy into forms of delinquency that require more emotional
understanding, such as bullying and social exclusion.
"When
you think about manipulative behavior or Machiavellian ways of relating, for
that to be a successful social strategy, you have to have some degree of
emotional intelligence," said Bacon.
"You
have to understand what effect your behavior is going to have on other people,
in terms of their thoughts, or feelings or emotions ... otherwise you won't
have the social skills to pull that off."

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