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Who are you, really? The puzzle of personality

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    What an intriguing
    group of individuals you are...
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    to a psychologist.
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    (Laughter)
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    I've had the opportunity
    over the last couple of days
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    of listening in on some
    of your conversations
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    and watching you interact with each other.
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    And I think it's fair to say, already,
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    that there are 47 people in this audience,
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    at this moment,
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    displaying psychological symptoms
    I would like to discuss today.
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    (Laughter)
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    And I thought you might
    like to know who you are.
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    (Laughter)
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    But instead of pointing at you,
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    which would be gratuitous and intrusive,
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    I thought I would tell you
    a few facts and stories,
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    in which you may catch
    a glimpse of yourself.
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    I'm in the field of research
    known as personality psychology,
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    which is part of a larger
    personality science
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    which spans the full spectrum,
    from neurons to narratives.
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    And what we try to do,
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    in our own way,
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    is to make sense of how each of us --
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    each of you --
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    is, in certain respects,
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    like all other people,
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    like some other people
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    and like no other person.
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    Now, already you may
    be saying of yourself,
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    "I'm not intriguing.
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    I am the 46th most boring person
    in the Western Hemisphere."
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    Or you may say of yourself,
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    "I am intriguing,
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    even if I am regarded by most people
    as a great, thundering twit."
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    (Laughter)
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    But it is your self-diagnosed boringness
    and your inherent "twitiness"
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    that makes me, as a psychologist,
    really fascinated by you.
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    So let me explain why this is so.
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    One of the most influential approaches
    in personality science
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    is known as trait psychology,
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    and it aligns you along five dimensions
    which are normally distributed,
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    and that describe universally held aspects
    of difference between people.
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    They spell out the acronym OCEAN.
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    So, "O" stands for "open to experience,"
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    versus those who are more closed.
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    "C" stands for "conscientiousness,"
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    in contrast to those with a more
    lackadaisical approach to life.
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    "E" -- "extroversion," in contrast
    to more introverted people.
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    "A" -- "agreeable individuals,"
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    in contrast to those
    decidedly not agreeable.
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    And "N" -- "neurotic individuals,"
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    in contrast to those who are more stable.
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    All of these dimensions have
    implications for our well-being,
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    for how our life goes.
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    And so we know that, for example,
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    openness and conscientiousness
    are very good predictors of life success,
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    but the open people achieve that success
    through being audacious
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    and, occasionally, odd.
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    The conscientious people
    achieve it through sticking to deadlines,
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    to persevering, as well as
    having some passion.
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    Extroversion and agreeableness
    are both conducive
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    to working well with people.
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    Extroverts, for example,
    I find intriguing.
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    With my classes, I sometimes
    give them a basic fact
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    that might be revealing
    with respect to their personality:
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    I tell them that it is virtually
    impossible for adults
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    to lick the outside of their own elbow.
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    (Laughter)
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    Did you know that?
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    Already, some of you have tried
    to lick the outside of your own elbow.
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    But extroverts amongst you
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    are probably those
    who have not only tried,
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    but they have successfully
    licked the elbow
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    of the person sitting next to them.
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    (Laughter)
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    Those are the extroverts.
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    Let me deal in a bit more detail
    with extroversion,
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    because it's consequential
    and it's intriguing,
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    and it helps us understand
    what I call our three natures.
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    First, our biogenic nature --
    our neurophysiology.
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    Second, our sociogenic or second nature,
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    which has to do with the cultural
    and social aspects of our lives.
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    And third, what makes you
    individually you -- idiosyncratic --
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    what I call your "idiogenic" nature.
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    Let me explain.
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    One of the things that characterizes
    extroverts is they need stimulation.
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    And that stimulation can be achieved
    by finding things that are exciting:
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    loud noises, parties
    and social events here at TED --
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    you see the extroverts
    forming a magnetic core.
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    They all gather together.
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    And I've seen you.
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    The introverts are more likely
    to spend time in the quiet spaces,
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    up on the second floor,
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    where they are able
    to reduce stimulation --
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    and may be misconstrued
    as being antisocial,
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    but you're not necessarily antisocial.
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    It may be that you simply realize
    that you do better
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    when you have a chance
    to lower that level of stimulation.
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    Sometimes it's an internal
    stimulant, from your body.
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    Caffeine, for example, works much better
    with extroverts than it does introverts.
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    When extroverts come into the office
    at nine o'clock in the morning
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    and say, "I really need a cup of coffee,"
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    they're not kidding --
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    they really do.
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    Introverts do not do as well,
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    particularly if the tasks
    they're engaged in --
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    and they've had some coffee --
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    if those tasks are speeded,
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    and if they're quantitative,
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    introverts may give the appearance
    of not being particularly quantitative.
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    But it's a misconstrual.
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    So here are the consequences
    that are really quite intriguing:
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    we're not always what seem to be,
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    and that takes me to my next point.
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    I should say, before getting to this,
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    something about sexual intercourse,
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    although I may not have time.
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    And so, if you would like me to --
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    yes, you would?
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    OK.
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    (Laughter)
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    There are studies done
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    on the frequency with which
    individuals engage in the conjugal act,
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    as broken down by male, female;
    introvert, extrovert.
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    So I ask you:
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    How many times per minute --
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    oh, I'm sorry, that was a rat study --
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    (Laughter)
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    How many times per month
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    do introverted men engage in the act?
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    3.0.
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    Extroverted men?
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    More or less?
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    Yes, more.
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    5.5 -- almost twice as much.
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    Introverted women: 3.1.
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    Extroverted women?
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    Frankly, speaking as an introverted male,
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    which I will explain later --
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    they are heroic.
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    7.5.
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    They not only handle
    all the male extroverts,
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    they pick up a few introverts as well.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    We communicate differently,
    extroverts and introverts.
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    Extroverts, when they interact,
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    want to have lots of social encounter
    punctuated by closeness.
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    They'd like to stand close
    for comfortable communication.
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    They like to have a lot of eye contact,
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    or mutual gaze.
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    We found in some research
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    that they use more diminutive terms
    when they meet somebody.
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    So when an extrovert meets a Charles,
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    it rapidly becomes "Charlie,"
    and then "Chuck,"
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    and then "Chuckles Baby."
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    (Laughter)
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    Whereas for introverts,
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    it remains "Charles," until he's given
    a pass to be more intimate
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    by the person he's talking to.
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    We speak differently.
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    Extroverts prefer black-and-white,
    concrete, simple language.
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    Introverts prefer --
    and I must again tell you
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    that I am as extreme an introvert
    as you could possibly imagine --
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    we speak differently.
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    We prefer contextually complex,
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    contingent,
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    weasel-word sentences --
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    (Laughter)
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    "More or less."
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    (Laughter)
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    "As it were."
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    (Laughter)
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    "Not to put too fine a point upon it." --
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    like that.
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    When we talk,
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    we sometimes talk past each other.
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    I had a consulting contract
    I shared with a colleague
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    who's as different from me
    as two people can possibly be.
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    First, his name is Tom.
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    Mine isn't.
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    (Laughter)
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    Secondly, he's six foot five.
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    I have a tendency not to be.
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    (Laughter)
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    And thirdly, he's as extroverted
    a person as you could find.
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    I am seriously introverted.
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    I overload so much,
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    I can't even have a cup of coffee
    after three in the afternoon
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    and expect to sleep in the evening.
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    We had seconded to this project
    a fellow called Michael.
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    And Michael almost brought
    the project to a crashing halt.
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    So the person who seconded him
    asked Tom and me,
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    "What do you make of Michael?"
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    Well, I'll tell you
    what Tom said in a minute.
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    He spoke in classic "extrovert-ese."
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    And here is how extroverted ears
    heard what I said,
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    which is actually pretty accurate.
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    I said, "Well Michael does have
    a tendency at times
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    of behaving in a way
    that some of us might see
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    as perhaps more assertive
    than is normally called for."
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    (Laughter)
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    Tom rolled his eyes and he said,
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    "Brian, that's what I said:
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    he's an asshole!"
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause)
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    Now, as an introvert,
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    I might gently allude to certain
    "assholic" qualities
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    in this man's behavior,
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    but I'm not going to lunge for the a-word.
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    (Laughter)
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    But the extrovert says,
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    "If he walks like one, if he talks
    like one, I call him one.
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    And we go past each other."
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    Now is this something
    that we should be heedful of?
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    Of course.
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    It's important that we know this.
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    Is that all we are?
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    Are we just a bunch of traits?
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    No, we're not.
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    Remember, you're like some other people,
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    and like no other person.
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    How about that idiosyncratic you?
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    As Elizabeth or as George,
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    you may share your extroversion
    or your neuroticism.
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    But are there some distinctively
    Elizabethan features of your behavior,
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    or Georgian of yours,
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    that make us understand you
    better than just a bunch of traits?
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    That make us love you?
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    Not just because you're
    a certain type of person.
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    I'm uncomfortable putting
    people in pigeonholes.
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    I don't even think pigeons
    belong in pigeonholes.
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    So what is it that makes us different?
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    It's the doings that we have
    in our life -- the personal projects.
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    You have a personal project right now,
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    but nobody may know it here.
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    It relates to your kid --
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    you've been back three times
    to the hospital,
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    and they still don't know what's wrong.
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    Or it could be your mom.
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    And you'd been acting out of character.
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    These are free traits.
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    You're very agreeable,
    but you act disagreeably
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    in order to break down those barriers
    of administrative torpor
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    in the hospital,
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    to get something
    for your mom or your child.
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    What are these free traits?
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    They're where were enact a script
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    in order to advance
    a core project in our lives.
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    And they are what matters.
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    Don't ask people what type you are;
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    ask them, "What are your core
    projects in your life?"
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    And we enact those free traits.
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    I'm an introvert,
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    but I have a core project,
    which is to profess.
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    I'm a professor.
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    And I adore my students
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    and I adore my field.
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    And I can't wait to tell them
    about what's new, what's exciting,
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    what I can't wait to tell them about.
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    And so I act in an extroverted way,
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    because at eight in the morning,
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    the students need a little bit of humor,
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    a little bit of engagement
    to keep them going
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    in arduous days of study.
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    But we need to be very careful
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    when we act protractedly out of character.
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    Sometimes we may find
    that we don't take care of ourselves.
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    I find, for example, after a period
    of pseudo-extroverted behavior,
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    I need to repair somewhere on my own.
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    As Susan Cain said in her "Quiet" book,
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    in a chapter that featured
    the strange Canadian professor
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    who was teaching at the time at Harvard,
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    I sometimes go to the men's room
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    to escape the slings and arrows
    of outrageous extroverts.
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    (Laughter)
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    I remember one particular day
    when I was retired to a cubicle,
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    trying to avoid overstimulation.
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    And a real extrovert came
    in beside me -- not right in my cubicle,
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    but in the next cubicle over --
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    and I could hear various
    "evacuatory" noises,
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    which we hate -- even our own,
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    that's why we flush
    during as well as after.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then I heard
    this gravelly voice saying,
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    "Hey, is that Dr. Little?"
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    (Laughter)
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    If anything is guaranteed
    to constipate an introvert for six months,
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    it's talking on the john.
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    (Laughter)
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    That's where I'm going now.
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    Don't follow me.
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    Thank you.
  • 14:54 - 14:56
    (Applause)
Title:
Who are you, really? The puzzle of personality
Speaker:
Brian Little
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:15

English subtitles

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