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INTJ Detectives and Personality Disorders<br />

Coolidge Axis II Inventory (CATI)<br />

A research team did a study comparing MBTI types with various personality disorders to see if<br />

there were any relationships (read here). 276 To do this, they took a group of 332 people and had<br />

them take the MBTI and the Coolidge Axis II Inventory (CATI). Then they observed which type(s)<br />

or preferences were correlated with which personality disorders.<br />

The list of the 14 personality disorders tested for by the CATI were correlated with MBTI<br />

characteristics as follows: Antisocial (N, T, P); Avoidant (I); Borderline (N, P); Dependent (I);<br />

Depressive (I, T); Histrionic (E, F); Narcissistic (N); Obsessive-Compulsive (I, S, T, J); Paranoid (I,<br />

T); Passive-Aggressive (I, N, P); Sadistic (N, T, P); Self-Defeating (I, N); Schizoid (I, T);<br />

Schizotypal (I, N, T, P).<br />

Generally speaking, it was found that the factors I, N, T, and P were most likely to be associated<br />

with mental illness.<br />

Number of Disorders Characteristic of Each MBTI Pole:<br />

• Introversion – 9<br />

• Intuition – 7<br />

• Thinking – 7<br />

• Perceiving – 5<br />

• Extraversion – 1<br />

• Sensing – 1<br />

• Feeling – 1<br />

• Judging – 1<br />

It would seem that mental illness—or at least our society's conception or incitement of it—is<br />

276 Coolidge, Segal, Hook, Yamazaki & Ellett, 2001

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