LSI Markers / Socionics

LSI Type Markers

1. Characterized by a stable sense of constancy in his sensations, self-esteem, opinions, lifestyle, and personality structure.2. Likely has stable and easily focused visual attention, adept at tracking ends in a web of tangled threads or wires.3. Rarely mixes up the order of letters when typing, even at high speeds.4. Knows exactly what to buy when shopping, ignoring other products.5. Time is secondary when it comes to perfecting work or documents to meet requirements.6. Stops eating on time due to strong self-control and timely satiety response.7. Tends to relentlessly focus on a single point regardless of circumstances.8. Speech lacks neologisms; features high verbal strictness and discipline.9. Characterized by extreme focus and high concentration levels.10. A servant to unchanging order, seeks a rigidly organized and structured environment.11. Key traits: reliability, conservatism, long memory for good and bad, inevitability of punishment, ideal cleanliness, orderly home, cautiousness, appreciation for beautiful, expensive items, self-respect. Difficulty in developing a genuine interest in new things.12. Low probability of involuntary motor automatisms.13. Strong self-control over desires, emotions, and behavior.14. Well-organized, predictable, and consistent in long-term interests.15. High inner focus, patience, and consistency in thoughts and actions.16. Specializes in precise business information, backed by numbers and facts.17. Thinks in a linear sequence rather than a chaotic spread of thoughts.18. Easily maintains focus on a single task for long periods.19. High inhibitory control over reactions, suppressing distractions effectively.20. Rigid structural thinking, prioritizes checking the placement and interrelation of objects.21. Unaffected by feelings of instability or excessive suggestibility from surroundings; protects personal boundaries well.22. Literal thinking, focused on exact adherence to conservative, traditional definitions.23. Prefers constancy and uniformity over change and diversity.24. Highly predictable behavior; follows a set routine without deviation.25. Weak probabilistic thinking, preferring quantified and literal interpretations.26. Enjoys roles involving direct sanitary inspections of food establishments.27. Suspicious and hostile toward anything new, foreign, or disruptive.28. Never deviates from the topic of discussion; maintains stable and concentrated thoughts.29. Favors uniformity in all aspects.30. Adheres strictly to standards, with no deviations allowed.31. Likes to personally and continuously control everything he deals with.32. Speech typically lacks metaphors, adjectives, and figurative comparisons.33. Rarely changes his opinion on any matter.34. Least likely among various psychotypes to have had childhood fear of the dark.35. Disinterested in esoteric subjects and does not believe in telepathy.36. Consistent work performance and life intensity.37. Struggles to empathize with others or identify with characters in fiction.38. Never imagines himself in someone else's place, even in thought experiments.39. High mood stability with minimal fluctuations or dependency on external stimuli.40. High tolerance for monotonous activities.41. Struggles with probabilistic thinking and handling ambiguous situations.42. Developed frontal cortical areas for speech planning.43. Enjoys collecting, organizing, or categorizing mundane items.44. Lacks motor restlessness typical of akathisia.45. Favors subordination and strict hierarchical structures.46. Rarely exaggerates or lies in his narratives.47. Highly meticulous, attentive to detail, and neat.48. Likely to be highly patient.49. Advocates for strict discipline and literal adherence to instructions.50. Relies on strict rule-following in crisis situations.51. Tends toward national isolationism, favoring closed borders and limited external interactions.52. Struggles to view situations from others' perspectives.53. Limited ability to understand or model independent minds ('theory of mind').54. Advocates for strong control over people through intimidation and force.55. High behavioral conservatism; resistant to changes in familiar environments.56. Forms romantic attachments infrequently but remains highly stable in them.57. Limited understanding of figurative language and a likely poor sense of humor.58. Supports stringent limitations on personal freedoms imposed by higher authorities.59. Uncompromisingly rejects anything that contradicts his chosen system.60. Conservative, resists change, and focuses on maintaining stability.61. Persists with a single task, ignoring minor distractions.62. Avoids discussing personal connections and networks.63. Lacks expansive, associative thought processes; focuses on essential details but may overlook important broader concepts.64. Exhibits high stability and persistence in desires and ongoing activities.65. Prefers detailed record-keeping and meticulous classifications.66. Lacks thought restlessness typical of cognitive akathisia.67. Partial to the idea of a police state, finding such control generally beneficial.68. Excels in organizing, categorizing, and systematic analysis.69. Maintains calm self-perception with full self-control.70. Exhibits a pedantic character, struggles with quick mental or task switching.71. Finds rapid task switching challenging due to delayed alternative motor excitation.72. Prefers integers over irrational numbers, clear boundaries over vague sets, and certainty over probability.73. Never experiences a sensation of nebulous mental images stirring near consciousness.74. Unlikely to experience breathlessness outside of physical exertion.75. Exhibits meticulous perfectionism, particularly in quality control.76. Emphasizes flawless accuracy and meticulous attention to detail in work.77. Favors absolute certainty, intolerant of probabilistic reasoning and unclear logical structures.78. Generally uninterested in other people.79. Resistant to monotony even in sensory-deprived environments.80. Embraces a regulatory and prohibitive life strategy, advocating for extensive societal restrictions.81. Displays high levels of self-control and restraint.82. Strong adherent to conservative values, looking to the past rather than the future for guidance.83. Weak activity of mirror neurons, not prone to mimicking others' actions like yawning or scratching.84. Often enjoys fishing as a hobby.85. Feels complete and coherent in his personal identity, with no issues regarding stability or self-identification.86. Principled in his retrograde conservatism, opposing all changes and reforms.87. Switches mental focus slowly, reluctant and somewhat challenged by relearning or improvisation.88. Tends to fixate his gaze steadily rather than scanning quickly.89. Prefers symmetry and completeness in aesthetics, disturbed by asymmetry or ambiguity.90. Highly skilled in systematic and hierarchical classification, particularly sensitive to minor logical details.91. Struggles to intuit others' thoughts, lacking insight into other minds.92. Perceives the world and imagines visual scenes as static, much like images on medals.93. Shows weakened pilomotor reflexes, indicative of a general reduction in defensive responses.94. Consistently employs formal logic in reasoning, excelling in strict logical processes.95. Dislikes scenarios involving multiple choices, correlating closely with habitual conservatism.96. Has a limited capacity for understanding poetry, with little appreciation for its imagery.97. Easily navigates hierarchical spatial structures, quickly distinguishing primary from secondary elements.98. Restrains his pleasures and needs, maintaining self-discipline.99. Focuses on completing tasks to perfection rather than merely starting them, disliking instability or disorder.100. Exhibits strong pedantic perfectionism in maintaining order among personal belongings.101. Highly organized and adheres strictly to planned sequences of necessary actions, avoiding any confusion or chaos.102. Maintains a regular, consistent rhythm in life, accurately estimating durations of time without difficulty.103. Highly sensitive to logical connections between objects and events, excelling in formal logical analysis.104. Does not engage in broad associative mental searches, blocking free associative exploration.105. Tends to articulate words clearly in speech, ensuring high intelligibility.106. Avoids borrowing or lending, maintaining financial independence.107. Persistently and doggedly upholds order and rules, ensuring completion and precision in all tasks.108. Highly punctual, never arriving late or just in time, but always slightly early.109. Known for his steadfastness, predictability, reliability, and adherence to established rules and laws.110. Prone to bradycardia, maintaining a slow heart rate even under stress.111. As a subordinate, he does not ask unnecessary questions or harbor doubts during tasks.112. Maintains a clear boundary between himself and the external world, distinguishing personal thoughts from others'.113. Likely believes in the effectiveness of physical punishment for children.114. Excels in mental operations involving spatial-logical relations, easily managing complex networks of relationships and physical paths.115. Favors maximum regulation of permissible societal behaviors, with extensive controls and prohibitions on unsanctioned activities.116. He has very weak intonational expressiveness in his voice (almost non-existent).117. In work, he exhibits high methodicalness with mandatory rationalization and structuring of the work process, including dividing the work into phases with planned creation of time and resource reserves.118. Likely prefers the image of a shark or wolf as a potential emblem for a user picture.119. Tends to blink less frequently, often maintaining a 'unblinking' gaze, though this is a weak statistical trend with exceptions.120. He is a homebody, prefers to settle permanently in one place and has no passion for changing locations or wandering.121. Likely has an increased predisposition to xenophobia, showing intolerance and fear of foreigners of different blood, appearance, and faith.122. Dislikes anything unexpected, unique, special, or original; not drawn to sudden, bright, or unexpected ideas.123. Always follows a strict sequence of actions, never starting from the middle or end, or doing tasks in pieces (e.g., rarely reads a book from the middle, dislikes watching movies from the middle).124. Has no interest in recognizing and nurturing talents in others.125. Likely has a small, 'beady' handwriting with small letter size, though this is only a probable statistical tendency.126. Finds the presence and participation of others often more discomforting than necessary or enjoyable. Has a low need for close interaction with others and is mostly interested in maintaining boundaries rather than unity. Can easily endure long periods of solitude.127. Has a very weak need for social interaction and relationships with others.128. His desires are emotionally weak; he easily controls them and never succumbs to temptations.129. Characterized by strong routine domestic perfectionism, meticulousness in daily life combined with constancy and stability of household habits, reluctant to deviate from them.130. Likely values consensus, unity, and cohesion of community, clan, or group as a leading ideological value; hence his isolationism, possibly envisioning an ideal life separated from 'others' by a literal or metaphorical barrier.131. Highly developed psychological functions for maintaining a clear sequence of all actions and movements, with precisely organized sequential chains. He rarely makes mistakes in the order of his hand movements, as well as in the order of words and letters in his speech and writing.132. Easily absorbs social and ethical prohibitions and norms of his environment, exhibits particular consistency in their formal execution. Tends to follow a multitude of rules meticulously, usually fulfilling his implied obligations to others more strictly than others and strictly adhering to the social 'correct' behavior protocol accepted in his environment. Intolerant of protocol violations by others.133. Struggles to come up with or generate any new ideas.