Details, Explanation and Meaning About Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI® development, research and training.]]The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI®) is a psychological test designed to assist a person in identifying their personality preferences.  It was developed by Katherine Briggs and her daughter Isabel Myers during World War II, and follows from the theories of Carl Jung as laid out in his work Psychological Types (1923).  The phrase is also sometimes used as a trademark of the publisher of the instrument, CPP Inc., and the trademark is registered by the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Trust.  It is important to make a distinction between the MBTI® and Keirsey Temperament Sorter, which are two unique theories of typology utilizing similar constructs.  More than 2 million people take the MBTI® each year worldwide and it has been translated into 30 languages.  

Table of contents
1 Best-fit types
2 Understanding the preferences
3 Type dynamics and the type table
4 Temperament
5 Skeptical view
6 Further reading

Best-fit types

Form M of the Indicator asks participants 93 questions about themselves in an attempt to identify four dichotomous preferences. Although the results are tallied in a numerical format; known as the preference clarity index (PCI), the instrument does not measure traits, as is typically done in similar tools, but rather types. In psychometrics, this means that the items have been specially designed to discriminate at the midpoint, and it is not necessarily the number that matters, but rather the side of the line the results fall on. The PCI is simply the indicator's level of certainty that you prefer one or the other. As instructed in the MBTI Manual, the Indicator is only a means by which the client is assisted in identifying their Best-fit type. Due to the nature of personality, this is a decision that can only be made by the person taking the Indicator, and never the Indicator itself.

Understanding the preferences

All preferences and preference combinations are equal.

Type dynamics and the type table

an estimate of the preferences found in the US population has been gathered]]The interactions of the preferences are known as type dynamics.  Understanding these dynamics is considered more important than memorizing characteristics or descriptions of types, but these are also very helpful when making practical use of type theory.  Descriptions are written by licensed psychologists based on data gathered from thousands of interviews and studies. The Center for Applications of Psychological Type has released short descriptions on the internet, which can be found here on their website.  The most in-depth descriptions, including statistics, can be found in “The Manual” ISBN 0891061304.

The type table is a visualization tool which is useful for discussing the relationships between preferences. It will typically be divided by selecting any pair of preferences and comparing or contrasting the dynamic qualities and groupings that are seen. One of the most common and basic has been used to the right. It is the grouping of the mental functions, ST, SF, NF and NT, and focuses on the combination of perception and judgement. Alternatively, if we group by the rows we will have the four attitudes which are IJ, IP, EP and EJ. There are also more complex groupings, such as combinations of perception and orientations to the outer world, which are SJ, SP, NP and NJ, or combinations of judgement and orientations to the outer world, which are TJ, TP, FP, and FJ. Hundreds of books have been written describing these preferences, clearly leaving much information out of the scope of this article.

Descriptions of the function-attitudes

In addition to a person's general preference for introversion or extroversion (attitudes), each function can be introverted or extroverted as well (function-attitudes), and the same function will have different qualities depending on its attitude .

Preferred order of functions in each type

In each person, all four of the functions (sensing, intuition, thinking and feeling) are present. These functions, which are the middle two letters, are ranked from most preferred to least preferred. The most preferred function is called the 'dominant', the second most preferred the 'auxiliary', the third the 'tertiary', and the fourth the 'inferior'.

The dynamics of the four letter preferences are slightly different in introverts and extroverts. In all combinations the second letter is the perceiving function and the third letter is the judging function. The fourth letter, J or P, shows which function is the dominant in extroverts, and which is the auxiliary in introverts. For the ESTJ preference then, the J means that the dominant is thinking, and the E means that it is extroverted thinking. For the INFP preference, the P means that the auxiliary is intuition. The I means the dominant function is introverted. Since the the auxiliary is intuition, the dominant must be feeling. As a rule, the auxiliary, tertiary, and inferior will always be in the opposite attitude of the dominant.

To identify the tertiary function, find the opposite of the auxiliary in the same attitude. With ESTJ the auxiliary is introverted sensing, so the tertiary is introverted intuition. To find the inferior (sometimes simply referred to as "4th", as it is not pathologically inferior), find the opposite function of the dominant, in the opposite attitude. This chart examines the dynamic breakdown of the function attitudes in each preference combination.

 
Type
ISITEJ
ISIFEJ
INIFEJ
INITEJ
Dominant Introverted_Sensing Introverted_Sensing Introverted_Intuition Introverted_Intuition
Auxiliary Extroverted_Thinking Extroverted Feeling Extroverted Feeling Extroverted_Thinking
Tertiary Extroverted Feeling Extroverted_Thinking Extroverted_Thinking Extroverted Feeling
Inferior Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Sensing
Type
ISETIP
ISEFIP
INEFIP
INETIP
Dominant Introverted Thinking Introverted Feeling Introverted Feeling Introverted Thinking
Auxiliary Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Intuition
Tertiary Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Sensing
Inferior Extroverted Feeling Extroverted Thinking Extroverted Thinking Extroverted Feeling
Type
ESETIP
ESEFIP
ENEFIP
ENETIP
Dominant Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Sensing Extroverted Intuition Extroverted Intuition
Auxiliary Introverted Thinking Introverted Feeling Introverted Feeling Introverted Thinking
Tertiary Introverted Feeling Introverted Thinking Introverted Thinking Introverted Feeling
Inferior Introverted Intuition Introverted Intuition Introverted Sensing Introverted Sensing
Type
ESITEJ
ESIFEJ
ENIFEJ
ENITEJ
Dominant Extroverted Thinking Extroverted Feeling Extroverted Feeling Extroverted Thinking
Auxiliary Introverted Sensing Introverted Sensing Introverted Intuition Introverted Intuition
Tertiary Introverted Intuition Introverted Intuition Introverted Sensing Introverted Sensing
Inferior Introverted Feeling Introverted Thinking Introverted Thinking Introverted Feeling


When you meet an extrovert you are meeting their dominant, most developed function. When you meet an introvert you are meeting their auxiliary, second most developed function. Studies have shown that, for this reason, introverts are sometimes underestimated.

Temperament

Temperament and psychological type are two unique methods of describing personality; in the number of elements used, the way they are described, and the way they interact. In addition, the theory of temperament is much older than psychological type, having its origins in ancient Greece. On page 59, The Manual states, "It is important to recognize that temperament theory is not a variant of type theory, nor is type theory a variant of temperament theory."

Hippocrates, a Greek philosopher who lived from 460-377 B.C., proposed four temperaments, which are related to the four humours. These were sanguine, choleric, phlegmatic, and melancholic. This chart compares the aspects of ancient Greek theory:

 

 

 

 

 
Humour Season Element Organ Qualities Temperament Characteristics
Blood spring air liver warm & moist sanguine courageous, hopeful, amorous
Phlegm winter water brain/lungs cold & moist phlegmatic calm, unemotional
Yellow bile summer fire gall bladder warm & dry choleric easily angered, bad tempered
Black bile autumn earth spleen cold & dry melancholic despondent, sleepless, irritable

In 1978, David Keirsey and Marilyn Bates reintroduced temperament theory in modern form and identified them as Guardian, Artisan, Idealist, and Rationalist. After developing modern temperament theory, Keirsey discovered the MBTI®, and found that by combining intuition with the judging functions, NT and NF, and sensing with the perceiving functions, SJ and SP, that he had descriptions similar to Hippocrates' original conception. The following table shows the locations of Keirsey's four temperaments in the MBTI type table:

 
Temperament
(SJ, SP, NF, NT)
iStJ
iSfJ
iNFj
iNTj
eStP
iSfP
iNFp
iNTp
eStP
eSfP
eNFp
eNTp
eStJ
eSfJ
eNFj
eNTj

Keirsey later went on to develop the Keirsey Temperament Sorter, which was first included in his book Please Understand Me. His Sorter is similar to the Indicator in that it uses the same lettering scheme. Studies in psychometrics have shown that it may have difficulty distinguishing between the feeling function and extroversion.

Skeptical view

Skeptics argue that the MBTI® has not been validated by double-blind tests, in which participants accept reports written for other participants, and are asked whether or not the report suits them, and thus does not qualify as a scientific assessment. Some even demonstrate that profiles can apparently seem to fit any person by confirmation bias, ambiguity of basic terms and the Byzantine complexity that allows any kind of behavior to fit any personality type.

Another argument says that, while the MBTI is useful in self-understanding, it is commonly used to pigeonhole people or for self-pigeonholing.

Further reading

An extensive bibliography of around 600 MBTI and temperament related works can be found here. The following are some of the most popular works.
  • Isabel Myers, Gifts Differing: Understanding Personality Type, (1980), ISBN 0-89106-064-2
  • Gorden Lawrence, People Types & Tiger Stripes, (1993), ISBN 0-935652-16-7
  • David Keirsey, Please Understand Me: Character & Temperament Types, (1978), ISBN 0-9606954-0-0
  • Multiple Authors, MBTI Manual - A guide to the development and use of the Myers Briggs Type Indicator, (1998), ISBN 0-89106-130-4
  • Carl Jung, Psychological Types, (1923), ISBN 0691097704

External links

Note: You cannot take the official MBTI on the Internet for free, but there are alternative indicators available.

Articles

Official sites

Unofficial sites


This is an Article on Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Myers-Briggs Type Indicator


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