OCEAN · Five-factor model
Five sliders, not a single box
The Big Five maps everyday personality into five continuous traits: Openness, Conscientiousness, Extraversion, Agreeableness, and Neuroticism (often paired with “emotional stability” when you flip the wording). It is a vocabulary researchers use to compare groups and track change — handy for self-reflection if you keep the limits in mind.
Pick a trait to go deeper
Scores sit on a spectrum. Most of us land somewhere in the middle on several dimensions; the write-ups below spell out what “higher” and “lower” usually mean in questionnaires and daily life — without turning it into a verdict.
Openness
Ideas, aesthetics, curiosity, and willingness to try what is unfamiliar.
Open the guide →Conscientiousness
Planning, follow-through, punctuality, and how tightly life is organized.
Open the guide →Extraversion
Positive emotion, sociability, and how much outward activity feels energizing.
Open the guide →Agreeableness
Trust, warmth, cooperation, and how directly you say what you think.
Open the guide →Neuroticism
How strongly stress and low mood show up — framed here without shame.
Open the guide →What you get from a run-through
When the interactive version ships, you will answer a set of short statements, get a simple score per trait, and see plain-language notes for the high, middle, and low ranges. Nothing here uploads your item responses to a social network or “matches” you with strangers — the point is a private snapshot you can ignore, revisit, or talk about with friends.
If you are comparing notes with someone who loves MBTI or Enneagram, think of those systems as sorting people into categories. The Big Five keeps every trait on a ruler. Neither replaces a conversation with a clinician if you need one.
Who this site is for
Students brushing up on intro psych, adults curious why two people can “both be introverts” yet behave differently, and anyone who wants a structured way to ask “what tends to be true about me lately?” — not “what is wrong with me.”