What is the
Myers–Briggs
Type Indicator?

The Myers–Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is a self-report questionnaire that makes pseudoscientific claims to categorize individuals into 16 distinct "personality types" based on psychology. The test assigns a binary letter value to each of four dichotomous categories: introversion or extraversion, sensing or intuition, thinking or feeling, and judging or perceiving. This produces a four-letter test result such as "INTJ" or "ESFP", representing one of 16 possible types.

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The Four Pairs

Explore All 16 Personality Types

Extraversion vs. Introversion

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Sensing vs. Intuition

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Thinking vs. Feeling

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Judging vs. Perceiving

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History

Who created the MBTI assessment?

It began with Katharine Cook Briggs and her daughter, Isabel Briggs Myers, in the United States in the early mid-20th century.

Briggs was inspired to research personality type theory when she met Isabel’s future husband, Clarence Myers. She noticed he had a different way of seeing the world. This intrigued her enough to start a literature review to understand different temperaments.

What is Jung’s influence on MBTI theory?

Carl G Jung published Psychological Types in 1921. Briggs read the English translation (1923) and saw similarities between their ideas. However, Jung’s theories of personal difference were much more developed.

Briggs and Myers thought Jung’s work was so useful that they wanted to make his ideas accessible to a wider audience.

When was the MBTI assessment first published?

World War II was a huge influence on the project’s development. Myers believed that if people understood each other better, they’d work together better and there’d be less conflict. The post-war world could be a better place.

She was determined to find a way to give people access to their psychological type. This led to the idea of a type indicator, and Myers dedicated the rest of her life to its development.

She spent the next 20 years developing questions and validating the instrument and the theory. The MBTI instrument was first published in 1962.