Cognitive functions test
TypeJung is a Jungian personality cognitive functions test: it maps Ni, Ne, Si, Se, Ti, Te, Fi, and Fe into a function-stack profile you can inspect before paying for anything.
If you are looking for a clinical memory, dementia, or medical cognition screen, this is not that. If you want to understand the personality functions behind MBTI-style type, start here.
Email yourself the assessment link and TYPEJUNG30 code. Start free, then decide after the result.
This page is for the plural search intent: cognitive functions test as used in Jungian and MBTI-style typology communities. The assessment asks 42 scenario-based questions and returns a free function-stack map.
The result is educational self-reflection. It does not diagnose memory problems, ADHD, dementia, trauma, anxiety, or any medical condition.
| If you mean... | Use TypeJung for... | Do not use it for... |
|---|---|---|
| Jungian cognitive functions | Ni, Ne, Si, Se, Ti, Te, Fi, and Fe pattern mapping | Clinical cognitive screening |
| MBTI-style type depth | Function evidence behind a likely type result | Official MBTI certification |
| Function stack testing | Dominant, auxiliary, tertiary, and inferior hypotheses | A permanent identity label |
| Stress and growth edge | Inferior-function reflection prompts | Mental health diagnosis |
A useful cognitive functions test should show the actual function map, not hide the evidence behind a single type code. TypeJung keeps the result inspectable so you can compare the highest signals, nearby alternatives, and stress-linked edge.
The paid report is only offered after the free result. That matters because the upgrade should deepen a pattern you already found useful, not force a blind purchase.
The plural wording usually means the searcher already knows one score is not enough. They want to see the relationship between functions: which mode leads, which supports it, and which one becomes awkward or reactive under pressure.
TypeJung is built around those relationships. It gives the map first, then explains how the pattern can be read as a stack hypothesis.
| Result area | Question it helps answer | Where to go deeper |
|---|---|---|
| Dominant signal | What mode of attention or judgment feels most trusted? | Dominant function guide |
| Auxiliary support | What balances or supports the leading function? | Type result page |
| Inferior edge | What becomes loaded, avoided, or reactive under stress? | Inferior function guide |
| Close alternatives | Why do two type results both seem plausible? | Type-vs-type comparison page |
People often compare TypeJung with Sakinorva, Keys2Cognition, Mistype Investigator, Michael Caloz, IDRlabs, and 16Selves. Those tools can be useful; the important question is whether the result is inspectable and whether the interpretation explains real situations.
TypeJung is strongest when you want a shorter free-first path, a clear function-stack map, stress-edge context, and an optional sample-backed paid report after the result.
Take the free TypeJung assessment first. If the function-stack map feels useful, Insight is currently CA$7 with TYPEJUNG30 and Mastery is CA$20.30 with the same Stripe code.
It is a Jungian personality cognitive functions test. It maps typology functions like Ni, Ne, Si, Se, Ti, Te, Fi, and Fe. It is not a medical, memory, dementia, ADHD, or clinical screening tool.
Yes. The assessment maps all 8 Jungian function-attitudes and uses them to form a likely function-stack and type hypothesis.
Yes. The 42-question assessment and core function-stack map are free. Paid reports are optional one-time CAD upgrades after the result is visible.
In typology searches, both usually mean a Jungian function assessment. The plural phrase often signals that the searcher wants all 8 functions mapped rather than one broad result.