dc.description.abstract |
The present study aims to understand the relationship between emotions and brain laterality.
The study empirically investigate the potential link between emotional intelligence, laterality
quotient, reaction time, and self-efficacy levels with sex of participant, age of participant,
valence of emotion in stimuli, and sex of stimuli as moderators. Brain lateralization was
assessed in the study using laterality quotient and reaction time. Further, the relationship
between emotional intelligence, its components and brain lateralization with moderators under
observation is explored. The validity of hemispheric hypotheses- right hemisphere hypothesis
and valence hypothesis is also evaluated. The study determines the pattern of laterality quotient
and the reaction time (index for behavioural processing of facial emotion). The linkage of
reaction time with emotional intelligence and laterality quotient is also explored. The relation
of self-efficacy with laterality and emotion is analysed. Since processing of perception of
emotional expression is a highly lateralized process, a free vision chimeric face test is
conducted for lateralization of brain (left and right hemisphere dominance) with respect to
emotions. The chimeric face test by Levy, Heller, Banich and Burton (1983) which measures
lateralization in processing positive facial emotions by presenting vertically split chimeric
faces, formed with one half showing a neutral expression and the other half showing a positive
expression, has been used as the basic platform to build a novel software for the present study.
A software for facial expression test is developed in this study using APACHE 2.4 platform in
PHP 5.2 based application in i-7, 5th generation Intel core. The lateralization of brain is
measured using a facial expression test with the use of designed software application, which
had male and female faces reflecting four emotions- happy, sad, anger and fear- used as stimuli
in the present study. The study thus relied on four facial emotions as experimental tool with
designed software using the logic of Levy et al. (1983) stimuli for perception of emotions. The
emotional intelligence score is measured using Genos Emotional Intelligence test by Palmer,
Stough, Harmer and Gignac (2009) and the significance of the brain lateralization on emotions
and its impact on employee at a workplace is observed. Also, self-efficacy level is measured
using general self-efficacy test by Schwarzer and Jerusalem (2004), a revised version of
Schwarzer and Jerusalem (1995). The sample data on 323 adult employees at managerial and
technical level is collected in the laboratory settings from laterality experiment using designed
software, and the questionnaire is filled by the participants. The preliminary analysis of
responses is done using descriptive and significance testing, and links between different aspects
are investigated using binomial-logistic, multinomial-logistic, multivariate and ordinary least
ii
square regression analysis. The key findings of the study reveal that higher emotional
intelligence displays stronger right hemisphere dominance. Further, males tend to be more
lateralized than females with right hemisphere advantage, and validate the existence of the right
hemisphere hypothesis in the sampled participants. The laterality quotient displays influence
due to the valence of emotion in stimuli, but not due to age of the participants. It is observed
that the emotions ‘happy’, ‘anger’, and ‘fear’ displayed right hemisphere dominance and ‘sad’
exhibited left hemisphere dominance. The study thus indicates the relationship between
emotional intelligence and brain laterality. Further, the results suggest that emotional
intelligence explains reaction time in processing emotions significantly, with lesser reaction
time required in perceiving positive emotions in stimuli than negative emotions, faster
processing for same sex stimuli (stimuli and participants), and for younger participants
perceiving emotions faster than older participants. Finally, emotional intelligence impacts selfefficacy
level of the participant positively. On the whole, the brain lateralization among Indian
employees exhibited different patterns with respect to observed variables and moderators,
stating the presence of specialization of hemisphere of the brain, and hemispheric dominance in
perception of emotions. With certain limitations to the present study, the potential links are
found between emotional intelligence, laterality quotient, reaction time and self-efficacy levels.
The findings of the study provides a platform for the studies intersecting between these
variables, and tries to depict the interdependence and links among different behavioural
constructs to understand the human behaviour holistically. |
en_US |