Big Five Movie Star Test
You are here because one of your friends linked you to his or her Big Five Movie Star Test result.
Take the testYour friend is the most like:
Daniel Day-Lewis
Compared to the general population, your friend is:
- High on Openness
- Above average on Conscientiousness
- Low on Extroversion
- Average on Agreeableness
- High on Neuroticism
According to scientific data compiled by the Ph.D.s Dana R. Carney, John T. Jost, Samuel D. Gosling, and Jeff Porter, your friend's scores indicate that he or she is:
- Eccentric, sensitive, and individualistic.
- Open, tolerant, and flexible.
- Creative, imaginative, and curious.
- Complex, nuanced, and open-minded.
- Someone with a strong desire for novelty and diversity.
- Likely to use fewer pauses in their speech than the average person.
- Definite, persistent, and tenacious.
- Reliable, responsible, orderly, and organized.
- Someone who doesn't give up easily.
- Likely to maintain more seconds of eye contact in a conversation than the average person.
- Likely to use fewer hand movements and gesticulations in a conversation than the average person.
- Withdrawn, reserved, and introverted.
- Tense, concerned, worrisome.
According to Geoffrey Miller, professor of psychology at the University of New Mexico, these slogans are likely to describe your friend's personality and outlook on life:
- "Talk nerdy to me."
- "A PBS mind in a Fox News world."
- "Don't say ironic when you mean coincidental."
- "If it fits on a bumper sticker, it's not philosophy."
- "Just because you can, it doesn't mean you should."
- "The harder I work, the luckier I get."
- "A goal is a dream with a deadline."
- "Today is the tomorrow that you forgot to plan for yesterday."
- "If cats could talk, they wouldn't."
- "People should come with an 'off' button."
- "I take a long time to warm up to strangers."
- "Tell me, what is this bright side of life that you speak of?"
- "Carefree sleep is a dream; a distant rumor."
According to a study done by the Ph.D.s Dana R. Carney, John T. Jost, Samuel D. Gosling, and Jeff Potter, your friend's scores indicate that he or she is:
- Amazingly, their personality is simply too smooth and well-rounded for this study to be able to say anything about them.
According to peer-reviewed studies from Texas AM University (US), Pepperdine University (US), Cambridge University (UK), and Sejong University (Korea), your friend's scores indicate that he or she is:
- More likely than the average person to want their political representatives to negotiate with the representatives of other parties in order to arrive at a workable compromise.
- More likely than the average person to have a critical view of the 2003 American invasion of Iraq.
- Likely to be more knowledgeable than the average person about political issues.
- More likely than the average person to care about the ambience of a hotel where they are staying, and not just its quality and service.
- More likely than the average person to buy something unexpected and fun that they stumbled across while shopping.
- More planful, organized, and goal-directed than the average person.
- More in favor of using military action to solve foreign policy disputes than the average person.
- Less likely than the average person to cheat on their homework and exams.
- Less likely than the average person to treat themselves to a little extra luxurious something when shopping.
- More deliberate and thorough in their actions than the average person.
- Someone who spends less time following the news and latest happenings than the average person.
- Less likely than the average person to attempt to enlist their friends and acquaintances to get behind the political issues that they support.
- More concerned than the average person with how they are perceived in the eyes of others.
- More likely than the average person to have a favorable view of labor unions.
- More alert to threats in their environment than the average person.
- Likely to be worse at performing under pressure than the average person. (So they should take care of themselves.)
According to a scientific study done by the Ph.D.s Gokul Chittaranjan, Jan Blom, and Daniel Gatica-Perez, your friend's scores indicate that if he or she own a smartphone he or she is:
- Likely to use longer words, and more long words, in their text messages than the average person.
- Likely to spend less time texting than the average person.
- Less likely to use internet apps on their smartphone than the average person.
- More likely to use productivity apps like (MS Office) on their smartphone than the average person.
- Less likely to use entertainment apps (like games, audio, and video) on their smartphone than the average person.
- Likely to spend more time emailing (as opposed to calling) from their smartphone than the average person.