“The Number of Triangles You See Determines Whether You Are a Narcissist”
Introduction (≈300–400 words)
Explain what narcissism is: Grandiose vs. vulnerable narcissism, traits, and prevalence.
Introduce the “triangle test” concept: an example of ambiguous figure tests in psychology, where perception reflects personality.
Thesis statement: While simplistic, the number of triangles one perceives in an image may reflect underlying narcissistic tendencies, highlighting the intersection of perception, cognition, and personality.
Section 1: Narcissism in Psychological Research (≈500–600 words)
Definition and types: Grandiose vs. vulnerable narcissism.
Diagnostic criteria (DSM-5) and everyday manifestations.
Psychological theories behind narcissism:
Freud’s psychoanalytic perspective.
Contemporary trait theories (Big Five correlations).
Why narcissists perceive the world differently: attention, self-focus, and cognitive biases.
Section 2: Perception and Personality (≈500–600 words)
Visual perception as a window into personality.
Ambiguous figures and perception tests in psychology:
Examples: Rubin’s vase, the Necker cube.
How different individuals interpret the same image differently.
Connection to narcissism: selective attention, self-referential processing, and pattern recognition.
Section 3: The Triangle Test Explained (≈500–600 words)
Describe the triangle test: counting triangles in a complex image.
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