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Home » A Psychologist Shares A Test That Uncovers Your ‘Hidden Superpower’ — Rooted In Personality Research

A Psychologist Shares A Test That Uncovers Your ‘Hidden Superpower’ — Rooted In Personality Research

By News RoomJanuary 29, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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A Psychologist Shares A Test That Uncovers Your ‘Hidden Superpower’ — Rooted In Personality Research
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We live in a culture obsessed with being well-rounded. From childhood, we’re encouraged to shore up our weaknesses. If you’re bad at math, get a tutor; if you’re socially awkward, force yourself to network; if you’re disorganized, download productivity apps. But what if this advice is fundamentally backwards?

I would argue that our greatest professional and personal satisfaction doesn’t come from fixing our deficits. Instead, it comes from identifying and leveraging our natural strengths. That’s why I created the fun, science-inspired Hidden Superpower Test — to help you know where your strengths might be hiding. You can take the test here to discover yours. It’s a fun way to look at yourself through a new lens.

The science behind this framework rests on three well-established personality dimensions that predict how we think, work and create.

Three Dimensions That Guide Your Cognitive Style

Personality is a multi-dimensional puzzle. At the risk of being reductionistic, here are three dimensions that matter a great deal in defining the way we think, work, behave and interact with the world:

  1. Abstract vs. concrete thinking. This dimension, closely related to the Big Five trait of openness to experience, determines whether you’re energized by future possibilities and theoretical concepts or by present-day practicalities and tangible realities. People high in openness — i.e., the abstract thinkers — excel at pattern recognition, strategic planning and innovation. They’re the ones asking “what if?” and envisioning possibilities others don’t see. People low in openness (concrete thinkers) excel at execution, troubleshooting and working with physical or immediate realities. They’re asking “what’s actually happening right now?” and solving real problems in real time. Neither is superior. Research consistently shows that both cognitive styles are essential for organizational success, but they contribute in different ways.
  2. Collaborative vs. independent work. This maps onto extraversion in the Big Five model. Extraverted individuals (the collaborators) gain energy from social interaction and think best when bouncing ideas off others. They excel in roles requiring coordination, persuasion and team motivation. Introverted individuals need solitude to do their best thinking. They excel in roles requiring deep focus, individual expertise and autonomous decision-making. Again, neither is better. The key is alignment between your natural preference and your role.
  3. Structured vs. flexible approach. This reflects conscientiousness, or the tendency to plan, organize and execute systematically versus improvising and adapting in real time. High-conscientiousness individuals — the structured thinkers — excel when success requires discipline, precision and following complex procedures. They’re reliable, thorough and detail-oriented. Low-conscientiousness individuals (flexible thinkers) excel in fluid, unpredictable environments where plans become obsolete quickly. They’re adaptable, spontaneous and comfortable with ambiguity.

Why Your Combination Matters More Than Individual Traits

The real insight comes from understanding how these three dimensions interact to create distinct cognitive “superpowers.” Consider two people who are both concrete thinkers. If one is collaborative and structured, they might excel at community stabilization — coordinating teams around established protocols to ensure everyone’s needs are met. If the other is independent and flexible, they might excel more at tactical crisis response — solving immediate problems alone through improvisation and gut instinct.

Same trait, different superpower.

This is why generic personality feedback often falls flat. Knowing you’re “introverted” or “conscientious” doesn’t tell you what to actually do with that information. But understanding the complexity within your cognitive profile is where the scientific magic starts to happen.

The Cost Of Fighting Your Natural Wiring

Organizational psychologist Brian Little has spent decades studying what he calls “acting out of character.” This is the phenomenon where people regularly behave in ways that contradict their core personality traits. His research reveals that while we can temporarily adopt behaviors outside our natural style, doing so consistently is exhausting and unsustainable.

A person wired for independent, structured execution can force themselves to work in collaborative brainstorming environments, but they’ll be drained by it. Meanwhile, a natural collaborator and improviser can force themselves to follow rigid procedures, but they’ll feel stifled and disengaged.

The hidden cost of trying to be “well-rounded” is that you spend enormous energy compensating for your natural wiring instead of channeling that energy into your areas of genuine strength. You end up mediocre at everything instead of exceptional at your particular thing.

Doubling Down On Your Superpower

Some of the most successful people I’ve encountered in my research aren’t well-rounded — they’re spiky. They’ve identified their cognitive superpower and built their entire professional life around it.

This doesn’t mean you can or should ignore weaknesses entirely. But it does mean, in many cases, that you should spend more of your development energy amplifying your strengths rather than band-aiding your weaknesses.

Your hidden superpower isn’t necessarily hidden because you haven’t discovered it yet. It’s hidden because you may have been trying to be someone you’re not. The goal is to become powerfully yourself — and then find the contexts where that version of you is exactly what the world needs.

Ready to discover your cognitive superpower? Take my science-inspired assessment here.

Big Five personality traits Career development cognitive archetypes Conscientiousness extraversion hidden superpower openness to experience personality test self-discovery strengths-based development
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