What is the personality type of Japanese Chin? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Japanese Chin from Dogs & Cats and what is the personality traits.
Japanese Chin personality type is ISFP, which is the least common of the 16 types and is, in fact, so rare that it is not included in the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator.
In fact, the only time the ISFP type has been included in the MBTI is when it was included as a "special" version of the "Self-Actualizing" type. The ISFP was an attempt to create a type that would be sufficiently different from the "sunny, optimistic, and warm" S types to be a legitimate type. The ISFP was also a special type because it was created out of a desire to include a type that would stand out from the other 16 types.
For a long time, ISFPs were regarded as being the "artist" types. In fact, this was the very first type that I ever learned about, when I discovered that my introverted, artistic self fit into that part of the MBTI. In my later years in college, I took a course that focused on Jungian psychology and was offered a chance to try out for a team to create a poster for the course. I took this opportunity to learn more about myself and discovered that I was, indeed, an ISFP.
The Japanese Chin, also known as the Japanese Spaniel, is a dog known for its strabismus of the eyes. Being both a lap dog and a companion dog, this toy breed has a distinctive heritage.