The Individual Typological Questionnaire is a psychological assessment designed to evaluate stable personality traits that influence behavior, emotional reactions, and interactions with others. The questionnaire helps identify dominant characteristics as well as patterns of self‑perception and perception of others in interpersonal situations.
The method is based on the psychoanalytic theory of motivational tendencies and helps determine which internal attitudes and defense mechanisms a person tends to rely on — for example, seeking approval, preferring independence, or showing competitiveness. It also assesses characteristics such as self‑confidence, emotional excitability, aggressiveness, cognitive flexibility, and other important aspects.
The Individual Typological Questionnaire includes several scales that reflect key personality features:
- Lie – tendency to socially desirable responses and the desire to present oneself in a more favorable light. ↗️
- Aggravation – tendency to exaggerate difficulties, complain, or emphasize distress. ↗️
- Extraversion – orientation toward the external world, sociability, activity, and ease of forming contacts. ↗️
- Spontaneity – tendency toward impulsive actions, emotional expressiveness, and behavior unconstrained by norms. ↗️
- Aggressiveness – degree of assertiveness, competitiveness, and potential hostility in interpersonal relations. ↗️
- Rigidity – resistance to change, adherence to habitual patterns, difficulty shifting or adapting. ↗️
- Introversion – depth of inner experiences, reservedness, and restraint in emotional expression. ↗️
- Sensitivity – susceptibility to criticism, heightened vulnerability, emotional impressionability. ↗️
- Anxiety – inner tension, tendency toward worries, insecurity, and anticipatory anxiety. ↗️
- Lability – emotional depth, sensitivity, empathy, responsiveness, and capacity for compassion. ↗️
Online Test
Instructions:
Please read each statement and indicate whether you agree or disagree with it.