I took the paper version of this test two weeks ago and filled in the online
version yesterday. I scored an 11 on the online version.
If this test were used as part of a professional evaluation I think it would be important
to understand the method of reasoning (an explanation) behind the responses. I provided detailed explains on my written test that were strictly based on the information presented in the examples. I think the test becomes meaningless if it doesn't provide a certain amount of containment of irrelevant outside experience.
Based on comments from other members it seems people had trouble differentiating their own personal reactions about situations and what they thought was acceptable or appropriate from the public at large.
When I responded the mindset I held was, If I have to take on the perspective of 'society at large' I'm going to assume people in the society are morally minded, considerate, and tolerant. With that perspective in hand, I did not select any responses indicating the behavior was ‘shocking’. All my responses were either A or B (fairly normal or rather strange).
The reason I did not label any of the behaviors shocking was the background information offered did not include references to malice or bad intent. I consider evil deeds shocking, though not out of the realm of what humans are capable of doing to each other. When a person acts with good intentions, even if their behavior seems out of the ordinary by someone else's standards, it does not mean the behavior is inherently eccentric.
Each of the questions included a framework, the first part described the point of origin or the stimulus for behavior (i.e. desire to protect someone from harm, desire a desire be honest, desire to alleviate potential suffering, desire to satisfy hunger or tiredness given an the opportunity to do so). The second part described the response. Assuming a very simple stimulus response model were in play, one could argue there was a rational basis for response behaviors because they were explicitly linked to the original stimuli.
Unfortunately rational behavior and acceptable behavior are often pitted against one another and acceptable behavior is often the victor. That is why people on the Austistic spectrum are generally misunderstood by those whose sole concern is to do what is acceptable in the eyes of others rather than doing what is reasonable given a particular set of circumstances.
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Pareto's Principle Applied to Personality Types:
Extroverts share 80% of what's on their mind; 20% of it is tangle thought.
The ratios are reversed for introverts.