Socially Intelligent
Across
- 3. – The nourishing engine of giving someone your complete attention.
- 5. – The doctor who proposed a way to measure SI in 1928.
- 6. – Biologically identified as the most highly contagious emotional expression.
- 9. – The type of neurons that activate when observing another's emotions.
- 10. – Goleman’s term for what we actually do with our social awareness.
- 12. – Behaviors that cause feelings of inadequacy, guilt, or frustration in others.
- 14. – The theorist who categorized intelligence into four primary domains.
- 16. – The acronym for situational awareness, presence, authenticity, clarity, and empathy.
- 18. OF MIND – The cognitive capacity to ascribe mental states to oneself and others.
- 19. – The acronym for the George Washington University Social Intelligence Test.
Down
- 1. – The brain structure responsible for the "low road" emotional radar.
- 2. – The cortex through which the "high road" neural pathway routes.
- 4. – Facing issues respectfully; one of the twelve distinct learnable skills.
- 5. – One of the specific subtests featured in the 1949 GWSIT.
- 7. – Smooth interactions at the nonverbal level required for social skill.
- 8. – The phenomenon where emotions transmit from person to person like a virus.
- 11. – The toxic behavior of insisting you are always right.
- 13. – Behaviors that make others feel valued, affirmed, and competent.
- 15. – The individual who imagined SI on a spectrum from toxic to nourishing.
- 17. – A toxic self-expression style that monopolizes all attention.