The Interpersonal Personality Circumplex (IPC-32) maps interpersonal style on two fundamental dimensions: dominance (assertive vs. submissive) and warmth (warm-agreeable vs. cold-quarrelsome). These two dimensions define eight octants — assured-dominant, arrogant-calculating, cold-hearted, aloof-introverted, unassured-submissive, unassuming-ingenuous, warm-agreeable, and gregarious-extraverted.
What This Report Shows
The sample report demonstrates Implicitify's interpersonal style profiling: a circumplex plot showing the individual's angular position and vector length (distance from the center indicates how differentiated their interpersonal style is), octant-level scores, dominance and warmth dimension scores, and interpretive text connecting the profile to real-world interpersonal patterns.
Clinical and Applied Value
The interpersonal circumplex is one of the most empirically supported models in personality psychology. It predicts interpersonal problems in therapy, leadership style in organizations, and complementarity in relationships. A person's position on the circumplex tells you not just how they tend to behave socially, but what kinds of behavior they tend to pull from others — the interpersonal dynamics they create, often without realizing it.