Neuro-PQ

My Neuro-PQ

What Is Neuro-PQ?

Someone on Twitter mentioned taking an online test designed to measure one’s Neuro-PQ, or Neurological Personality Quotient. It was designed by Dario Nardi. According to the test site,

This questionnaire helps determine how you use 23 different regions of your brain! It is based on neuroscience research and the author’s actual brain imaging results of hundreds of people. Each region of your brain helps you do various concrete and abstract tasks. By completing the NeuroPQ, you will get a profile of which tasks you tend to excel at or that engage you. The result is a unique visual portrait of your brain.

~Dario Nardi

Who could resist such an interesting test? Not me! I actually took the Neuro-PQ twice. The first time, I did not follow the proper instructions for specifying email address and payment information, so I did not think I would get my results. The next time, I followed directions. Both times I got the results, which differed slightly from one another.

What Were My Neuro-PQ Scores?

Test results are emailed and come in the form of a 12-page PDF document, which explains the primary functions of various areas of the brain and analyzes the respondent’s answers to determine her strengths (and weaknesses). Two of these were particularly interesting to me:

Keys to Success
Where I Put My Effort

My strengths seem to be compatible with my MBTI and Socionics typing. For that matter, my weaknesses also seem to make sense. What does not make as much sense is the placement of specific skills in particular areas of the brain, if Lenore Thomson’s placement of the eight cognitive functions is correct (see “Structure in Typology“). I definitely will have to give this more thought.

More on My Neuro-PQ

I have taken the Neuro-PQ test twice since my original two attempts in March 2020 (once in December 2020 and again in August 2021). None has come out exactly the same. As a result, I decided to average my results by rank order and ended up with this:

Neuro-PQ Average

I am very consistent in my two brain region preferences at the top of the list. Others are not quite so certain. I suppose the only way to really know would be to undergo the actual brain mapping that Dario Nardi does. Unfortunately, he is in California, so this would not be easily arranged. I will have to settle for the online version of the test.