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Extroverts Come In Two Different Types, Brain Scans Reveal - PsyBlog http://www.spring.org.uk/2015/03/extroverts-two-types-different-brain...

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There are two types of extroverts, each with distinct brain anatomies.

There are two different types of extroverts agentic and affiliative each with distinct brain structures, new research finds.

Agentic extroverts are go-getters': the kind of outgoing people who are persistent, assertive and focused on achievement.

The other kind of extroverts have a softer side.

Affiliative extroverts tend to be more affectionate, friendly and sociable.

Both types of extroverts share distinct brain anatomy as well as displaying distinct differences, the new research finds.

Dr Tara White, the studys first author, said that extroverts in general are keen to share:

These are people just sharing with you how they tend to experience the world and whats important to them.

The fact that thats validated in the brain is really exciting. Theres a deep reality there.

This is the first glimpse of a benchmark of what the healthy adult brain looks like with these traits.

Scanning extroverts
For the study, researchers scanned the brains of 83 people to look for similarities and differences in key areas of the brain.

They found that both types of extroverts had more gray matter in the medial orbitofrontal cortex.

This area of the brain has been linked to making decisions based on rewards.

Agentic extroverts, though, had larger volumes in some other areas as well.

These were related to learning and memory for reward, cognitive control of behaviours and planning and execution.

The study cant tell us whether these areas are the cause of the personality differences or the result of them, or perhaps some

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Extroverts Come In Two Different Types, Brain Scans Reveal - PsyBlog http://www.spring.org.uk/2015/03/extroverts-two-types-different-brain...

combination of the two.

The study is published in the journal Cognitive, Affective, and Behavioral Neuroscience (Grodin & White, 2015).

The studys authors concluded:

[The] findings provide a developmental benchmark from which to better understand the etiology of problems in agentic
extroversion and affiliative extroversion, such as can occur in normal aging and neurodegenerative disease.

Extrovert image from Shutterstock

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Dr Jeremy Dean is a psychologist and the author of PsyBlog and HealthiestBlog.com. His latest book is "Making Habits, Breaking
Habits: How to Make Changes That Stick". You can follow PsyBlog by email, by RSS feed, on Twitter and Google+.

Published: 2 March 2015

Text: All rights reserved.

Images: Creative Commons License

2 von 2 17.03.2015 15:51

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