Journal article

Emotional intelligence training improves stress regulation and performance in high-stress occupations

JB King, Y Li, NA Gillespie, NM Ashkanasy

Scientific Reports | Published : 2026

Open access

Abstract

In this randomized controlled study (N = 66) in an elite military setting, we compared stress regulation and performance outcomes between soldiers who received emotional intelligence (EI) training (n = 35) and those who received non-EI control training (n = 31). The EI-trained group underwent 15 h of instruction focused on recognizing, understanding, and regulating emotions. When exposed to intense simulated combat stressors, EI-trained participants showed significantly lower biological stress levels compared to controls and superior performance across multiple domains: shooting accuracy (94.1% vs. 51.6%, p <.001), memory retention for mission-critical details during stress serials (M = 5.15..

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University of Melbourne Researchers