Move over introverts and extroverts. Psychiatry has a new term — otrovert — for those who don’t fit neatly into either label.
Extroverts thrive on social interaction and often find extended periods of solitude to be draining and isolating. They ...
We are quick to place ourselves on the extremes of the social spectrum, but the truth is that personality is more malleable ...
Many have a general understanding of the key distinctions between an introvert vs extrovert status. But, how does the stimulus of today's world factor in? The test breaks down whether you’re ...
From casinos to theme parks, concerts, and crowded bars, true introverts tend to avoid these environments at all costs, ...
Extroverted introverts tend to prefer deep conversations with select people as opposed to surface-level conversations with lots of folks. Maskot via Getty Images You’ve probably been asked if you’re ...
Janeczko elaborates, “For an extrovert, a shockingly quiet environment—with private, individual white-walled offices combined with little to no interaction with others on a regular basis throughout ...
The genius of Jennifer Kahnweiler’s new book, The Genius of Opposites: How Introverts and Extroverts Achieve Extraordinary Results Together, is that she doesn’t throw out facile strategies for meeting ...
Not an introvert, but not an extrovert either? How about ambivert? Still a no? There's a new personality type for that. Dr. Rami Kaminski recently coined the term "otrovert" from the Spanish word ...