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Here at PsychPress we offer various solutions to the screening of emotional Intelligence and anxiety among many of our psychometric assessments. Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test (MSCEIT) The MSCEIT is an ability-based assessment of emotional intelligence and measures a person's capacity for reasoning with emotional information. It employs a variety of interesting and creative tasks to elicit valuable information about your respondents' emotional intelligence skills. The MSCEIT generates four branch scores: Managing Emotions, Understanding Emotions, Using Emotions and Perceiving Emotions. Post-traumatic Stress Scale (PTSS) Developed by Australian researchers and psychologists Wayne Scott M.Psych and Jagdish Dua PhD, the Post Traumatic Stress Scale (PTSS) is an efficient and reliable tool used not only for the accurate diagnosis of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder but also to measure the intensity and severity of this disorder. The PTSS is a newly developed self-report measure of PTSD which is entirely based on DSM-IV (APA, 1994) criteria. The PTSS is unique in that it assesses all the criteria necessary for a diagnosis of PTSD as stipulated in the DSM-IV. Emotional Reasoning Questionnaire (ERQ) The Emotional Reasoning Questionnaire (ERQ) provides a quick, reliable measurement of a person's emotional reasoning. It treats emotional reasoning as a cognitive ability, a branch of emotional intelligence. As such, it is useful as a predictor in roles where emotional reasoning is a useful ability, such as customer service roles or sales roles. Adult Manifest Anxiety Scale (AMAS) Developed by the authors of the highly regarded Revised Childrens Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS), this eagerly awaited self-report inventory measures the level and nature of anxiety in adults. The AMAS incorporates the best attributes of the RCMAS while adding age-appropriate item content and scales for three different stages of adult life. The scale is available in three forms: AMAS-A for adults (ages 19 to 59); AMAS-E for elderly individuals (60 and above); and AMAS-C for students enrolled in college. The three forms were independently developed and normed, and each includes some unique items and/or subscales. The AMAS-A, for example, contains several items addressing work pressures, while the AMAS-E includes items focusing on fear of aging, and the AMAS-C adds a Test Anxiety scale. For more information on PsychPress and available Psychometric Tests, please visit www.psychpress.com.au, or feel free to contact us at info@psychpress.com.au |
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