Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
All cognitive endeavors require new associations to be made, or old ones to be reviewed. There are marked differences between individuals in the speed with which associations are formed. Speed in the formation of associations is the foundation of individual differences in intelligence. Only a sub-sample of associations is relevant in a given proble
... See moreHand Eysenck • Genius: The Natural History of Creativity (Problems in the Behavioural Sciences, Series Number 12)
neuroticism, openness to experience, extraversion, conscientiousness, and agreeableness—commonly referred to as the five-factor or Big Five framework of personality.
Oxford University Press • The Oxford Handbook of Political Psychology (OXFORD HANDBOOKS SERIES)
Le schéma de personnalité le plus utile que j’ai trouvé pour m’aider à comprendre ce qui motive les gens est celui décrit par Barondes dans son livre. Il s’appelle « Big Five » ou OCEAN : ouvert d’esprit, consciencieux, extraverti, agréable, névrosé. Les chercheurs qui ont mis ce schéma au point ont choisi des adjectifs qui pourraient être utilisés
... See moreCécile Capilla • La tribu des mentors, quand les plus grands nous inspirent (French Edition)
By far the most extensively examined—and firmly established—system for grouping personality traits is the framework known as the Big Five. (Other systems, such as the Myers-Briggs test—or MBTI, as it is also known—are less widely used in academic psychology.) The Big Five traits are openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, and neur
... See moreSam Gosling • Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You
Openness to Experience, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism – think OCEAN – constitute the genome of human personality.
Kevin Dutton • The Wisdom of Psychopaths
Neuroticism and Agreeableness.
Kevin Dutton • The Wisdom of Psychopaths
I’m noticing so many different frameworks map into the same “quaternity” (a cross, plus-sign, looking things, composed of two spectrums that criss-cross).
(direction) My word, Jung’s word, Gebser’s word, from Rooster’s diagram:
(up) Mindfulness, Sensation, Archaic, Sacramental
(down) Perspective, Intuition, Mythical, Gnostic
(right) Creativity, Feeling
Psychologists have traditionally described personality in terms of what they call the Five Factor Model – five dimensions that are usually labelled Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion/Introversion, Agreeableness and Neuroticism, or OCEAN for short.