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Sunday, January 27, 2019

Unlucky Thirteen



Today is the 13th anniversary of this blog. I wanted to write a sharp and subversive post.1 Or at least compose a series of self-deprecating witticisms about persisting this long. Alas, it has been an extremely  difficult year.

Instead, I drew inspiration from Twitter (@neuroecology) and a blogger who's been at it even longer than I (@DoctorZen). Very warily I might add, because I knew the results would not be flattering or pretty.

Behold my scores on the “Big Five” personality traits (and weep). Some of the extremes are partly situational, and that's why I'm presenting these traits separately. Sure, negative emotionality is a relative fixed part of my personality, but the 100% scores on depression and anxiety are influenced by grief (due to the loss of my spouse of 12 years). Personality psychologists would turn this around and say that someone high in trait negative emotionality (formerly known as the more disparaging “neuroticism”) would be predisposed to depression and anxiety.




Another fun trait score is shown below. This one might be even sadder. Yeah, I'm introverted, but people in my situation often tend to withdraw from friends, family, and society.2 Again, reverse the causality if you wish, but social isolation is not an uncommon response.





But hey, I am pretty conscientious, as you can see from my overall test results on the Big Five. You too can take the test HERE.




I'll have something more interesting for you next time.



Footnotes

1 Why? To prove to myself that I can still do it? To impress the dwindling number of readers? To show how the blog has not exceeded its expiry date it still has relevance in its own modest and quirky way.

2 Hey, I actually had two social engagements this weekend! My lack of assertiveness is disturbing, however. But I absolutely do not want to take the lead on anything right now.




10 comments:

  1. I scored 33 on agreableness and 42 on negative emotionality. The rest is above average.

    Alain

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  2. David J LittleboyJanuary 28, 2019 6:55 AM

    I also come out sky high on "openness to new experience", which is completely hilarious because as I move into retirement, I'm very specifically intending to not do anything new at all but rather push deeper into the rabbit holes I've already dug myself (Go (the game), photography (landscape/abstract), Japanese language and lit, bebop/hard bop guitar).

    And to add insult to injury, a BBC test of a similar nature tells me that the country I'm most similar to personalitywise is Cyprus (huh?) and most different from is Japan. Which is odd, since I've lived here half my like and am very fond of the Japanese, the language, and the literature and art. And the Japanese do real well at the not specifically Japanese things I do (photography, jazz, Go).

    Whatever.

    Condolences on your loss. I hope you can come to some peace with it. I'm not much help, though. My father ran into hideous medical "care" at the "best hospital in Boston" and didn't survive it, It was 10 years ago, and I'm still raging at it. It hurts.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hey Neurocritic, thanks for keeping this blog going! Despite your difficult year, your observations bring life to many of my conversations. My fiancé is a cognitive neuroscientist, and I'm teaching a graduate psychology courses, so your candid, sometime sardonic commentary helps us both keep the sensationalism, from media and students, in balance. Have you done any posts on neuroimaging and music? We hope you see it through to year 14!

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  4. Dear Neurocritic,

    What kind of thing is the internet when it can't be used to
    send something someone really needs: a dose of inner strength
    booster? That's what I'd like to send you for the 13th
    Birthday of your Blog.

    What I can send, and must hope will do as an alternative, is
    an expression of my appreciation of, and great liking for, your
    Blog. Your continuing to write this despite your deep
    personal pain and grief, has, for me, at least, been an
    example of how the really toughest parts of life can be lived
    through.

    I am sure I'm not the only one of your Blog readers to benefit
    from your carefully thought out and prepared posts, and who
    enjoy them as the small diamonds they are, amongst the vast
    amounts of crap that floods out over the internet each day.
    So I hope this message will help you know that others out here
    need you to keep on, and wish you the inner strength to do so.

    Best regards,

    Tim

    ReplyDelete
  5. Thanks for all your comments! (and sorry for the delay in posting them).

    ReplyDelete
  6. David J Littleboy - Thank you for the condolences.

    I also felt that some of the descriptions were inaccurate (e.g., with 92 negative emotionality / 25 extraversion, my relationships were not train wrecks):

    "High negative emotionality: Conflict in relationships doesn’t have to be inherently destructive, and thank goodness for that, because your tendency toward anger, frustration and anxiety means your relationships probably have plenty of tension. What’s more, you’re likely carrying that predisposition toward conflict with you from relationship to relationship. The good news is that other parts of your personality affect relationship quality, too. Nobody is only one trait. For example, higher scores on extraversion are correlated with satisfying marriages, so a person with high negative emotionality and high extraversion might have a very different relationship history than someone high in negative emotionality and low in extraversion."

    That's really funny, because my relationship was mostly conflict-free, except for a stretch of time when the other party had moderately uncontrolled bipolar 1. The right medication made all the difference. And before that I was in a relationship where we never argued or disagreed.

    ReplyDelete
  7. To Anonymous #1 and #2 - Thanks for your encouragement and kind words. It has been hard to continue writing, more difficult than I anticipated. Besides a lack of emotional energy and focus, I wonder "why bother?" So I really appreciate your support.

    For music, there's: Music and Empathy

    More Music, More Empathy (this one has neuroimaging)

    I have a few oddities like Music from Your Brain and several case studies of unusual syndromes involving music.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Oh, now I noticed that Anonymous #2 is Tim, so thank you Tim.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Dear Neurocrtic - your friends and readers are still here. We will support you needing to mourn and remember.

    I'm a computer scientist and so well out of my depth with Big 5 anything. Instead I just wanted you to know you still have friends and readers - even if the Canadian ones are buried under a meter of snow.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Thank you, Mark. I very much appreciate your comments. And Sandra would have been happy to hear about Canadian readers!

    ReplyDelete