Who are you, really? The puzzle of personality | Brian Little | TED

12,539,078 views ・ 2016-07-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:13
What an intriguing group of individuals you are ...
0
13043
3261
00:17
to a psychologist.
1
17505
1448
00:18
(Laughter)
2
18977
1439
00:20
I've had the opportunity over the last couple of days
3
20440
3106
00:23
of listening in on some of your conversations
4
23570
2586
00:26
and watching you interact with each other.
5
26984
2166
00:29
And I think it's fair to say, already,
6
29174
2525
00:31
that there are 47 people in this audience,
7
31723
5188
00:37
at this moment,
8
37494
1218
00:39
displaying psychological symptoms I would like to discuss today.
9
39414
4133
00:43
(Laughter)
10
43571
1347
00:44
And I thought you might like to know who you are.
11
44942
3002
00:47
(Laughter)
12
47968
1423
00:49
But instead of pointing at you,
13
49415
1687
00:51
which would be gratuitous and intrusive,
14
51126
3198
00:54
I thought I would tell you a few facts and stories,
15
54865
3001
00:57
in which you may catch a glimpse of yourself.
16
57890
3037
01:02
I'm in the field of research known as personality psychology,
17
62089
4236
01:06
which is part of a larger personality science
18
66349
3440
01:09
which spans the full spectrum, from neurons to narratives.
19
69813
5109
01:15
And what we try to do,
20
75337
1453
01:17
in our own way,
21
77601
1563
01:19
is to make sense of how each of us --
22
79188
2744
01:22
each of you --
23
82793
1226
01:24
is, in certain respects,
24
84467
2078
01:26
like all other people,
25
86569
1363
01:28
like some other people
26
88993
1384
01:31
and like no other person.
27
91243
2018
01:34
Now, already you may be saying of yourself,
28
94579
3167
01:37
"I'm not intriguing.
29
97770
1745
01:41
I am the 46th most boring person in the Western Hemisphere."
30
101597
5449
01:47
Or you may say of yourself,
31
107895
2289
01:50
"I am intriguing,
32
110208
1907
01:53
even if I am regarded by most people as a great, thundering twit."
33
113252
3951
01:57
(Laughter)
34
117227
1190
01:58
But it is your self-diagnosed boringness and your inherent "twitiness"
35
118441
5860
02:04
that makes me, as a psychologist, really fascinated by you.
36
124325
4427
02:09
So let me explain why this is so.
37
129172
2351
02:12
One of the most influential approaches in personality science
38
132284
4161
02:16
is known as trait psychology,
39
136469
1590
02:18
and it aligns you along five dimensions which are normally distributed,
40
138083
5369
02:23
and that describe universally held aspects of difference between people.
41
143476
6990
02:31
They spell out the acronym OCEAN.
42
151379
2329
02:34
So, "O" stands for "open to experience,"
43
154105
3051
02:37
versus those who are more closed.
44
157180
2351
02:39
"C" stands for "conscientiousness,"
45
159555
3175
02:42
in contrast to those with a more lackadaisical approach to life.
46
162754
3644
02:46
"E" -- "extroversion," in contrast to more introverted people.
47
166422
4643
02:51
"A" -- "agreeable individuals,"
48
171089
2692
02:53
in contrast to those decidedly not agreeable.
49
173805
3422
02:57
And "N" -- "neurotic individuals,"
50
177599
2644
03:00
in contrast to those who are more stable.
51
180267
2673
03:04
All of these dimensions have implications for our well-being,
52
184268
3390
03:07
for how our life goes.
53
187682
2506
03:10
And so we know that, for example,
54
190762
2349
03:13
openness and conscientiousness are very good predictors of life success,
55
193135
4975
03:18
but the open people achieve that success through being audacious
56
198829
4377
03:23
and, occasionally, odd.
57
203230
2178
03:26
The conscientious people achieve it through sticking to deadlines,
58
206077
4365
03:30
to persevering, as well as having some passion.
59
210466
3922
03:35
Extroversion and agreeableness are both conducive
60
215662
3886
03:39
to working well with people.
61
219572
2578
03:42
Extroverts, for example, I find intriguing.
62
222866
2988
03:45
With my classes, I sometimes give them a basic fact
63
225878
2983
03:48
that might be revealing with respect to their personality:
64
228885
2967
03:52
I tell them that it is virtually impossible for adults
65
232356
5046
03:57
to lick the outside of their own elbow.
66
237426
3837
04:01
(Laughter)
67
241287
1254
04:02
Did you know that?
68
242565
1384
04:05
Already, some of you have tried to lick the outside of your own elbow.
69
245505
4189
04:09
But extroverts amongst you
70
249718
1776
04:11
are probably those who have not only tried,
71
251518
2611
04:14
but they have successfully licked the elbow
72
254153
2490
04:16
of the person sitting next to them.
73
256667
1691
04:18
(Laughter)
74
258382
1002
04:19
Those are the extroverts.
75
259408
1685
04:21
Let me deal in a bit more detail with extroversion,
76
261117
3419
04:24
because it's consequential and it's intriguing,
77
264560
2959
04:27
and it helps us understand what I call our three natures.
78
267543
3481
04:31
First, our biogenic nature -- our neurophysiology.
79
271048
3671
04:34
Second, our sociogenic or second nature,
80
274743
2983
04:38
which has to do with the cultural and social aspects of our lives.
81
278279
3858
04:42
And third, what makes you individually you -- idiosyncratic --
82
282744
6903
04:50
what I call your "idiogenic" nature.
83
290190
3046
04:53
Let me explain.
84
293260
1156
04:56
One of the things that characterizes extroverts is they need stimulation.
85
296901
3485
05:00
And that stimulation can be achieved by finding things that are exciting:
86
300971
4724
05:05
loud noises, parties and social events here at TED --
87
305719
4037
05:09
you see the extroverts forming a magnetic core.
88
309780
3227
05:13
They all gather together.
89
313031
1659
05:14
And I've seen you.
90
314714
1415
05:16
The introverts are more likely to spend time in the quiet spaces
91
316153
3323
05:19
up on the second floor,
92
319500
1823
05:21
where they are able to reduce stimulation --
93
321347
3792
05:25
and may be misconstrued as being antisocial,
94
325163
3935
05:29
but you're not necessarily antisocial.
95
329122
2998
05:33
It may be that you simply realize that you do better
96
333310
2898
05:37
when you have a chance to lower that level of stimulation.
97
337436
4411
05:42
Sometimes it's an internal stimulant, from your body.
98
342998
4148
05:47
Caffeine, for example, works much better with extroverts than it does introverts.
99
347170
4915
05:52
When extroverts come into the office at nine o'clock in the morning
100
352109
3179
05:55
and say, "I really need a cup of coffee,"
101
355312
2885
05:58
they're not kidding --
102
358221
1151
05:59
they really do.
103
359396
1173
06:01
Introverts do not do as well,
104
361531
1806
06:03
particularly if the tasks they're engaged in --
105
363361
2517
06:06
and they've had some coffee --
106
366913
1545
06:08
if those tasks are speeded,
107
368482
2138
06:10
and if they're quantitative,
108
370644
1879
06:12
introverts may give the appearance of not being particularly quantitative.
109
372547
4394
06:17
But it's a misconstrual.
110
377580
1640
06:19
So here are the consequences that are really quite intriguing:
111
379244
3044
06:22
we're not always what seem to be,
112
382312
2083
06:24
and that takes me to my next point.
113
384419
3284
06:28
I should say, before getting to this,
114
388196
2556
06:30
something about sexual intercourse,
115
390776
2680
06:33
although I may not have time.
116
393480
2101
06:35
And so, if you would like me to --
117
395605
2872
06:38
yes, you would?
118
398501
1151
06:39
OK.
119
399676
1151
06:40
(Laughter)
120
400851
1085
06:41
There are studies done
121
401960
1160
06:43
on the frequency with which individuals engage in the conjugal act,
122
403144
5325
06:49
as broken down by male, female; introvert, extrovert.
123
409406
3239
06:53
So I ask you:
124
413100
1151
06:54
How many times per minute --
125
414275
2072
06:57
oh, I'm sorry, that was a rat study --
126
417162
1884
06:59
(Laughter)
127
419070
2007
07:02
How many times per month
128
422151
1802
07:06
do introverted men engage in the act?
129
426715
3259
07:10
3.0.
130
430486
1390
07:11
Extroverted men?
131
431900
1632
07:13
More or less?
132
433556
1610
07:15
Yes, more.
133
435616
1628
07:17
5.5 -- almost twice as much.
134
437607
2367
07:21
Introverted women: 3.1.
135
441264
2568
07:23
Extroverted women?
136
443856
1596
07:25
Frankly, speaking as an introverted male,
137
445476
3346
07:28
which I will explain later --
138
448846
1737
07:30
they are heroic.
139
450607
1581
07:32
7.5.
140
452973
1775
07:35
They not only handle all the male extroverts,
141
455782
2352
07:38
they pick up a few introverts as well.
142
458158
2093
07:40
(Laughter)
143
460275
1896
07:42
(Applause)
144
462195
2320
07:48
We communicate differently, extroverts and introverts.
145
468796
4301
07:54
Extroverts, when they interact,
146
474576
1506
07:56
want to have lots of social encounter punctuated by closeness.
147
476106
4465
08:00
They'd like to stand close for comfortable communication.
148
480595
2991
08:04
They like to have a lot of eye contact,
149
484547
2199
08:06
or mutual gaze.
150
486770
1344
08:09
We found in some research
151
489241
1207
08:10
that they use more diminutive terms when they meet somebody.
152
490472
2998
08:13
So when an extrovert meets a Charles,
153
493873
2713
08:16
it rapidly becomes "Charlie," and then "Chuck,"
154
496610
2885
08:19
and then "Chuckles Baby."
155
499519
1679
08:21
(Laughter)
156
501222
1492
08:23
Whereas for introverts,
157
503032
1405
08:24
it remains "Charles," until he's given a pass to be more intimate
158
504461
4905
08:29
by the person he's talking to.
159
509390
2220
08:32
We speak differently.
160
512044
2785
08:36
Extroverts prefer black-and-white, concrete, simple language.
161
516934
5237
08:43
Introverts prefer -- and I must again tell you
162
523854
3794
08:47
that I am as extreme an introvert as you could possibly imagine --
163
527672
4357
08:52
we speak differently.
164
532853
1717
08:54
We prefer contextually complex,
165
534594
3995
08:58
contingent,
166
538613
1932
09:00
weasel-word sentences --
167
540569
2016
09:02
(Laughter)
168
542609
1023
09:03
More or less.
169
543656
1362
09:05
(Laughter)
170
545385
1436
09:06
As it were.
171
546845
1200
09:08
(Laughter)
172
548069
1015
09:09
Not to put too fine a point upon it --
173
549108
2000
09:11
like that.
174
551848
1173
09:13
When we talk,
175
553955
1402
09:15
we sometimes talk past each other.
176
555381
1742
09:17
I had a consulting contract I shared with a colleague
177
557724
2628
09:20
who's as different from me as two people can possibly be.
178
560376
3004
09:23
First, his name is Tom.
179
563739
1779
09:26
Mine isn't.
180
566499
1214
09:27
(Laughter)
181
567737
1271
09:29
Secondly, he's six foot five.
182
569032
1931
09:30
I have a tendency not to be.
183
570987
1952
09:32
(Laughter)
184
572963
1043
09:34
And thirdly, he's as extroverted a person as you could find.
185
574030
3723
09:37
I am seriously introverted.
186
577777
2380
09:40
I overload so much,
187
580670
1695
09:42
I can't even have a cup of coffee after three in the afternoon
188
582389
4814
09:47
and expect to sleep in the evening.
189
587227
2288
09:50
We had seconded to this project a fellow called Michael.
190
590178
3952
09:55
And Michael almost brought the project to a crashing halt.
191
595320
4172
10:00
So the person who seconded him asked Tom and me,
192
600528
3796
10:05
"What do you make of Michael?"
193
605244
1459
10:06
Well, I'll tell you what Tom said in a minute.
194
606727
2270
10:09
He spoke in classic "extrovert-ese."
195
609021
2316
10:11
And here is how extroverted ears heard what I said,
196
611955
3575
10:15
which is actually pretty accurate.
197
615554
1953
10:17
I said, "Well Michael does have a tendency at times
198
617531
4260
10:22
of behaving in a way that some of us might see
199
622385
3286
10:26
as perhaps more assertive than is normally called for."
200
626489
4135
10:30
(Laughter)
201
630941
2310
10:33
Tom rolled his eyes and he said,
202
633611
1777
10:35
"Brian, that's what I said:
203
635412
2529
10:38
he's an asshole!"
204
638629
1400
10:40
(Laughter)
205
640053
2177
10:42
(Applause)
206
642254
1821
10:45
Now, as an introvert,
207
645509
1267
10:46
I might gently allude to certain "assholic" qualities
208
646800
5181
10:52
in this man's behavior,
209
652005
1295
10:53
but I'm not going to lunge for the a-word.
210
653324
2804
10:56
(Laughter)
211
656152
1776
10:59
But the extrovert says,
212
659228
1266
11:00
"If he walks like one, if he talks like one, I call him one."
213
660518
2874
11:03
And we go past each other.
214
663416
1412
11:05
Now is this something that we should be heedful of?
215
665498
3966
11:09
Of course.
216
669488
1166
11:10
It's important that we know this.
217
670678
1584
11:12
Is that all we are?
218
672286
1539
11:14
Are we just a bunch of traits?
219
674670
2041
11:17
No, we're not.
220
677563
1262
11:20
Remember, you're like some other people
221
680116
2256
11:23
and like no other person.
222
683266
1709
11:25
How about that idiosyncratic you?
223
685487
2435
11:28
As Elizabeth or as George,
224
688485
3251
11:31
you may share your extroversion or your neuroticism.
225
691760
2880
11:36
But are there some distinctively Elizabethan features of your behavior,
226
696251
4007
11:40
or Georgian of yours,
227
700282
2197
11:43
that make us understand you better than just a bunch of traits?
228
703732
3850
11:48
That make us love you?
229
708240
2403
11:51
Not just because you're a certain type of person.
230
711461
2994
11:55
I'm uncomfortable putting people in pigeonholes.
231
715188
2624
11:59
I don't even think pigeons belong in pigeonholes.
232
719081
2591
12:03
So what is it that makes us different?
233
723235
2069
12:06
It's the doings that we have in our life -- the personal projects.
234
726004
4897
12:11
You have a personal project right now,
235
731403
1821
12:13
but nobody may know it here.
236
733248
3086
12:17
It relates to your kid --
237
737504
1808
12:19
you've been back three times to the hospital,
238
739336
2200
12:21
and they still don't know what's wrong.
239
741560
1896
12:25
Or it could be your mom.
240
745373
1324
12:28
And you'd been acting out of character.
241
748092
2102
12:30
These are free traits.
242
750218
1562
12:33
You're very agreeable, but you act disagreeably
243
753521
3080
12:36
in order to break down those barriers of administrative torpor
244
756625
3873
12:40
in the hospital,
245
760522
1151
12:41
to get something for your mom or your child.
246
761697
2626
12:45
What are these free traits?
247
765814
1507
12:47
They're where we enact a script
248
767345
2570
12:49
in order to advance a core project in our lives.
249
769939
2653
12:53
And they are what matters.
250
773744
2058
12:55
Don't ask people what type you are;
251
775826
2272
12:58
ask them, "What are your core projects in your life?"
252
778742
2754
13:01
And we enact those free traits.
253
781520
1784
13:03
I'm an introvert,
254
783328
1315
13:04
but I have a core project, which is to profess.
255
784667
4586
13:09
I'm a professor.
256
789640
1208
13:11
And I adore my students,
257
791798
1857
13:15
and I adore my field.
258
795080
1587
13:16
And I can't wait to tell them about what's new, what's exciting,
259
796691
5778
13:23
what I can't wait to tell them about.
260
803366
2252
13:25
And so I act in an extroverted way,
261
805642
1820
13:27
because at eight in the morning,
262
807486
1528
13:29
the students need a little bit of humor,
263
809038
2344
13:31
a little bit of engagement to keep them going
264
811406
2722
13:34
in arduous days of study.
265
814152
1451
13:36
But we need to be very careful
266
816277
1437
13:38
when we act protractedly out of character.
267
818456
2956
13:42
Sometimes we may find that we don't take care of ourselves.
268
822679
4732
13:49
I find, for example, after a period of pseudo-extroverted behavior,
269
829309
4614
13:53
I need to repair somewhere on my own.
270
833947
2300
13:57
As Susan Cain said in her "Quiet" book,
271
837916
3119
14:01
in a chapter that featured the strange Canadian professor
272
841059
2972
14:04
who was teaching at the time at Harvard,
273
844055
1995
14:07
I sometimes go to the men's room
274
847145
1660
14:08
to escape the slings and arrows of outrageous extroverts.
275
848829
3696
14:13
(Laughter)
276
853069
1084
14:14
I remember one particular day when I was retired to a cubicle,
277
854177
6372
14:20
trying to avoid overstimulation.
278
860573
1925
14:23
And a real extrovert came in beside me -- not right in my cubicle,
279
863117
5247
14:28
but in the next cubicle over --
280
868388
1955
14:30
and I could hear various evacuatory noises,
281
870367
2323
14:32
which we hate -- even our own,
282
872714
2269
14:35
that's why we flush during as well as after.
283
875007
2730
14:37
(Laughter)
284
877761
1732
14:40
And then I heard this gravelly voice saying,
285
880360
4590
14:44
"Hey, is that Dr. Little?"
286
884974
2435
14:47
(Laughter)
287
887433
1929
14:50
If anything is guaranteed to constipate an introvert for six months,
288
890664
6367
14:57
it's talking on the john.
289
897055
1761
14:58
(Laughter)
290
898840
1230
15:00
That's where I'm going now.
291
900094
2100
15:02
Don't follow me.
292
902696
1356
15:04
Thank you.
293
904564
1179
15:05
(Applause)
294
905767
9118
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7