Scientific limitations
Self-report bias
This diagnosis is based on self-reporting. Your mood that day or your unconscious self-image can shift the results.
Cultural bias
Personality tests have largely been developed in Western cultures, so the same behavior can carry different meaning across cultures.
Change over time
Personality isn't completely fixed. Life experience and conscious effort can gradually shift it.
The simplification problem
The 11 types are a 'model' that makes the complexity of human personality easier to grasp. No real person fits any single type perfectly.
How to read the results
A tendency, not a destiny
Results show a 'tendency' — they don't determine your actions or your life. Anyone can act differently depending on the situation.
There's no good or bad
No type is 'good' or 'bad'. Each has its strengths and challenges; what matters is how you use them.
Don't use it to judge others
Using your own result to understand yourself is fine. Avoid putting labels on others as 'they're this type, so…'
When to consult a professional
In situations like the following, we recommend consulting a professional (clinical psychologist, counselor, psychiatrist, etc.) rather than relying only on personality diagnosis.
- Anxiety or low mood strong enough to interfere with daily life
- Persistent, significant problems in your relationships
- Deep distress about your personality or behavior patterns
- Past trauma is affecting your present
This diagnosis is not a substitute for medical diagnosis or treatment. If you're facing serious concerns, please reach out to a professional.