Sensitivity type (Highly Sensitive Person)

How deeply your nervous system registers and responds to your surroundings — from subtle beauty to stress and other people's moods.

Sensory-processing sensitivity (SPS) is a temperament trait measured by Aron & Aron's Highly Sensitive Person Scale (1997). The trait shows up as Aron's DOES profile — depth of processing, overstimulation, emotional reactivity and sensitivity to subtle stimuli. The three sensitivity groups — dandelions, tulips and orchids — were empirically identified by Lionetti, Aron, Aron, Burns, Jagiellowicz & Pluess (2018), building on the differential-susceptibility 'orchid and dandelion' metaphor (Boyce & Ellis, 2005). A reflective self-ID, not a clinical assessment, and distinct from introversion — roughly a third of highly sensitive people are extroverts. (Sensory-processing sensitivity / Highly Sensitive Person Scale (Aron & Aron))

Groups

References

Related topics

All topics on ArtaQuest