Extraversion and introversion

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    Hans Eysenck was a German psychologist who specialized in the fields of personality and intelligence. However, Eysenck also did work in the fields of behavioral therapy, astrology and parapsychology, sexual behavior and smoking and health. Although, Eysenck’s most influential work is in that of personality psychology, where he developed the basic concept of personality which many major personality psychologists would base their work off of, likewise expanding upon many of Eysenck’s concepts.…

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    Introduction……………………………………………………………………………3 2.0 The Big Five Dimensions of Personality……………………………………………..3 3.0 Analysis and Reflection……………………………………………………………….3 3.1 Agreeableness……………………………………………………………........3 3.2 Conscientiousness…………………………………………………………….4 3.3 Extraversion…………………………………………………………………..4 4.0 Goal Setting…………………………………………………………………………..5 5.0 Conclusion……………………………………………………………………………5 6.0 Reference List………………………………………………………………………..6 1.0 Introduction Personality is one of the most…

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    discipline, my senior science fair project focused on extraversion versus introversion and its impact on short term memory. For the project, I had to research different theories on introversion and extraversion and how memory works. From there I had to form a hypothesis supported by my research. Once my hypothesis was formed, I could set up my experiment in which I used a questionnaire to determine where subjects were on a scale of extraversion and a short term memory test. After performing…

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    Psychology began as a study of the soul. Plato believed the soul was an individual’s belief they are distinct from but also connected to their physical and social environments. Aristotle believed the soul was a set of psychological powers or attributes. In fact, Garcia-Valdecasas (2005) noted that Aristotle used the term ‘mind’ to collectively refer to these attributes. From that, psychology evolved into a science of the self. James (1890) viewed the self as a fundamental concept in the ‘science…

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    34% Feeling, and 12% Judging). The results showed that I have a moderate preference of extraversion over introversion, a slight preference of intuition over sensing, a moderate preference of feeling over thinking, and a slight preference of judging over perceiving. However, I am not sure how accurate these results are. For example, my results showed I have a moderate preference of extraversion over introversion. However, I would describe myself as more of an introvert. I feel as if my…

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    It followed previous research in exhibiting the positive correlation between extraversion and frequency of Facebook use but also showed the association of neuroticism, agreeableness and extraversion with prevalence of self-presentation using social media. In particular, the motivations of neurotic individuals was examined as high neuroticism was one of the best predictors for online expression…

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    energy- extraversion vs introversion, (2) the way the person prefers to take in information- sensing vs intuition, (3) how one decides and comes to conclusions- thinking vs feeling, and (4) the way the person approaches the outside world- judging vs perceiving (Hirsh & Kummerow, 1998, p. 2). Hirsh and Kummerow (1998) explain that…

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    investigates the personality type assigned to me using the Jung Typology Test. This personality assessment is derived from Carl Jung and Isabel Briggs Myers approach to classifying individuals using three dichotomies derived from Carl Jung - extraversion vs introversion, judging vs perceiving, thinking vs feeling, and a fourth dichotomy judging vs perceiving; proposed by Isabel Briggs Myers. Possible combinations of these dichotomies result in sixteen different personality types each assigned…

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    This four letter ISFJ stand for Introversion, Sensing, Feeling and Judging. Introversion (I) is defined as introverted people that tent to be quiet and reserved, the Sensing (S) is defined as people that prefer concrete information rather than abstract theories. Feeling (F) is defined as people that place a greater emphasis on personal considerations rather than objective information. Judging (J) is people that are planners and tend to be very well-organized. Introversion (I)- this applies to me…

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    personality is one of the most widely used systems of traits. This model is known to be the most practical and applicable in personality psychology. The Five-Factor Model of Personality is defined of five traits, referred to as the "Big Five": Extraversion, Agreeableness,…

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