# When emotion meets reason: the development and validation of EpiCT-CI scale to measure epistemic emotions in critical thinking application and cultural identity constructions

**Authors:** Yue Peng

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2025.1687003 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2025-10-15

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a new scale to measure how emotions influence critical thinking and cultural identity in intercultural contexts.

## Contribution

The novel EpiCT-CI Scale measures epistemic emotions in critical thinking and cultural identity construction.

## Key findings

- Epistemic emotions include neutral, positive, and negative states, not just linear progressions.
- The EpiCT-CI Scale was refined into a four-dimensional 19-item tool through rigorous validation.
- The scale effectively captures emotions related to cultural inquiry, reflection, identity, and adaptation.

## Abstract

Epistemic emotion is a significant concept in education, but traditional scales rarely focus on the status of epistemic emotions in intercultural issues. Additionally, cultural identity and critical thinking are vital in navigating the complexities inherent in intercultural contexts. Existing measures of critical thinking and cultural identity seldom consider the influence of emotions. The EpiCT-CI Scale, developed in this research, seeks to bridge this gap by measuring how epistemic emotions influence critical thinking and cultural identity in intercultural settings.

Developing and validating the EpiCT-CI Scale combines qualitative and quantitative methods. Study 1 collected data from students’ comments, judgments, and narrations about critical thinking during COVID-19. Study 2 focused on the emotional experiences of constructing cultural identity by reading, analyzing, and writing about cultural issues. The data from Studies 1 and 2 are analyzed in NVivo 15.0. The original EpiCT-CI Scale is validated through SPSS 20.0 and Amos 29.0 in Study 3.

The results from Studies 1 and 2 indicate that epistemic emotions are a blend of neutral, positive, and negative states, rather than simple linear progressions. The initial 52-item scale underwent a thorough evaluation, modification, and validation process in Study 3, resulting in a four-dimensional 19-item EpiCT-CI Scale, which represents four groups of epistemic emotions: joy in critical cultural inquiry, boredom in critical cultural reflection, curiosity in cultural identity reflection, and distress in cultural adaptation. The EpiCT-CI Scale provides an effective tool for assessing epistemic emotions in cultural identity constructions and critical thinking applications.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)

## Full text

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## References

121 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12568516/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12568516