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[Relationship between Eysencks personality types and intellectual performance]

D Greif, S Greif, D Liepmann

    Zeitschrift Fur Klinische Psychologie Und Psychotherapie
    |January 1, 1977
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Eysenck's hypotheses on personality and intellectual performance were tested. Results indicate neurotic introverts performed worst, while stable and neurotic extraverts performed best, contradicting the original psychophysiological predictions.

    Area of Science:

    • Psychology
    • Cognitive Science
    • Psychophysiology

    Background:

    • Hans Eysenck proposed psychophysiological theories linking personality types to intellectual performance.
    • Previous research has explored the correlation between personality traits and cognitive abilities.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To empirically test Eysenck's psychophysiological hypotheses.
    • To investigate the relationship between specific personality types and intellectual performance metrics.

    Main Methods:

    • Utilized data from two partial samples (N=314).
    • Assessed personality types using the ENNR-Questionnaire.
    • Measured intellectual performance with 23 complex items derived from Jäger's factor analytic studies, evaluating both speed and quality.

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    Main Results:

    • Analyses of variance falsified Eysenck's hypotheses across all tested variables.
    • Neurotic introverts demonstrated the poorest performance in both speed and quality across most intelligence factors and complexity levels.
    • Stable and neurotic extraverts exhibited superior performance compared to neurotic introverts.

    Conclusions:

    • Eysenck's psychophysiological hypotheses regarding personality and intellectual performance are not supported by this study's findings.
    • Personality type, specifically introversion/extraversion and stability/neuroticism, significantly impacts cognitive performance, with neurotic introverts underperforming.
    • The results suggest a nuanced relationship between personality and intelligence that deviates from Eysenck's original predictions.