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Myers-Briggs Type Indicator


# 58902
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
This paper discusses the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, one of the most widely used tests for assessing personality characteristics for general non-psychiatric populations.
5,270 words (approx. 21.1 pages) | 21 sources | APA | 0 United States


Paper Summary:

This paper explains that the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, developed by Katherine C. Briggs and her daughter, Isabel Briggs Myers, and based on Swiss psychologist Carl Gustav Jung's studies on psychological type, is a self-report inventory and objective assessment, which is not diagnostic in a psycho-pathological sense. The author describes Meyers-Briggs Type Indicator's sixteen possible personality types, which are based on the four primary ways people differ from one another in their perceptions of the world and the way they accept information. The paper presents many cases in which researchers, including those in the fields of psychology and social psychology, have used the Myers-Briggs assessment tool as a means of studying a specific hypothesis.

From the Paper:

"Regardless of these scholars strong support for assessment systems, they could not convince corporations of their need. Proven connections did not exist between personality type and job success. However, a couple of decades later, Katherine C. Briggs tried again by using Jungian psychology as the rationale. Unlike others before him during the late 1800s and early 1900s, Jung saw patterns of behavior. He said psychological types are consistencies in the way people prefer to perceive and make judgments. In Jung's theory, all conscious mental activity could be classified into four mental processes: two perception processes of sensing and intuition and two judgment processes of thinking and feeling. The senses and intuition perceptions are relied on to sort, weigh, analyze and evaluate through the judgment processes of thinking and feeling."

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 11, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Myers-Briggs-Type-Indicator/58902

MLA Citation:

"Myers-Briggs Type Indicator" 15 January 2012. Web. 11 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Myers-Briggs-Type-Indicator/58902>




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