Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)

The MBTI is a personality framework that sorts people into 16 types built from four dichotomies: Introversion/Extraversion (I/E), Sensing/Intuition (S/N), Thinking/Feeling (T/F), and Judging/Perceiving (J/P). It was created by Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers in the mid-20th century, drawing loosely on Carl Jung's theory of psychological types. Our free course tours all 16 types and the Jungian cognitive functions beneath them, then closes with an honest look at why psychologists question the test's reliability — so you can use your type as a mirror, not a verdict.

Extremely popular but scientifically criticised: it shows low test-retest reliability and its four discrete dichotomies are not supported by trait research, which finds personality varies continuously rather than in categories. (Katharine Cook Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers, developed from the 1940s onward, based on Carl Jung's typology)

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