Trait Meta-Mood Scale

#TMMS
Emotions
Abilities

An emotional intelligence-related scale measuring attention to feelings, emotional clarity, and mood repair.

An emotional intelligence-related scale measuring attention to feelings, emotional clarity, and mood repair. 22 questions, about 11 minutes Get a structured…

22 questions
Questions
11 min
Estimated time
0
completed

Assessment Dimensions

Emotion pay attention to

toward Emotion of degree

Emotion

toward not Emotion of and Understanding.

Emotion

and not Emotion of

Who It Is For

people who want to understand how they notice, understand, and regulate emotions

Test Description

Trait Meta-Mood Scale is an English-localized assessment focused on emotional attention, emotional clarity, emotion repair, and awareness of one own emotional experience. It contains 22 items across 3 scoring dimensions, and it presents the same user-facing testing flow, scoring cues, and report context in English. Use the report as a self-reflection and screening reference rather than a standalone diagnosis; important mental health or relationship decisions should still be discussed with a qualified professional when needed.

FAQ

1

What does the Trait Meta-Mood Scale measure?

Trait Meta-Mood Scale focuses on emotional attention, emotional clarity, emotion repair, and awareness of one own emotional experience. The English version keeps the same assessment purpose as the Chinese source while presenting the user-facing explanation, questions, scoring context, and report copy in English.
2

How long does it take?

It usually takes about 5 minutes to complete 22 items. Answer according to your recent or typical experience, depending on the instructions shown in the test.
3

Who is this assessment for?

This assessment is mainly for people who want to understand how they notice, understand, and regulate emotions. It is designed for self-understanding, screening, or reflection, not as a standalone clinical diagnosis.
4

How should I use the result?

Use the result as a structured reference. If the report points to serious distress, risk, relationship harm, or persistent functional impairment, consider speaking with a qualified mental health or counseling professional.