Profile layer
Big Five Layer
In Myndora, Big Five is not only a test result. It becomes a saved behavior layer inside your profile, with a first result page, a fuller overview page, a growing history across retakes, and a baseline that gets clearer over time.
What this layer measures
The Big Five layer measures broad behavior patterns: how you tend to respond to social energy, structure, pressure, cooperation, and new ideas in everyday life.
Inside Myndora, that makes Big Five the broadest behavioral layer in the profile. It gives a high-level map of how you usually show up before the more specific layers add their own perspective.
How the test works
The current Big Five flow uses lightweight test variants that both feed the same long-term Big Five history. The goal is not to produce one dramatic verdict, but to collect repeated measurements that can be compared over time.
That means each completed session becomes one data point in the same layer. Retakes do not replace the layer. They help Myndora estimate what keeps returning versus what may have been more temporary.
What result you get
Your first result gives you a current trait pattern across the five broad dimensions. It is an immediate read of the session you just completed.
If you save that result to your account, it becomes part of your profile history. From there, later retakes can be compared against it instead of leaving the result as a one-off snapshot.
What the result page shows
The first Big Five result page is a quick read of your current trait pattern. It is designed to give you immediate orientation right after the session.
That page is only the first layer surface. In Myndora's own flow, it points forward to the fuller overview page, where the broader profile view for this layer begins to matter more.
How it appears in overview and history
The Big Five overview page shifts from the current session to your more usual result across saved tests so far. It shows your trait pattern, deeper breakdowns, and the way this layer is settling over time.
History and retakes are what make that possible. As more results are stored, Myndora can estimate a clearer baseline and show how steady or variable the layer has been.
How it interacts with other layers
Big Five gives the broad behavior baseline that the other layers can add to. 16 Types can show how you tend to process and decide. Enneagram can show what deeper motivations and stress patterns may sit underneath.
That is why Big Five often works well as a starting layer in Myndora. It gives the profile a wide behavioral frame that later layers can complement rather than replace.
What this layer adds inside Myndora
- A current-session result page for your immediate trait pattern
- A saved behavior layer inside your profile when attached to an account
- An overview page that shifts from one result to your more usual pattern over time
- Retakes, history, baseline estimation, and steadiness tracking inside the same layer
Common questions
Is the Big Five layer free in Myndora?
Yes. Big Five is the free starting layer in Myndora and can become part of your saved profile over time.
Why is this called a layer instead of only a test?
Because in Myndora the test is just the entry point. What matters in the product is the saved result, the overview page, the retake history, and the way the layer contributes to the wider profile.
Why does Big Five matter in the full profile?
Because it creates the broad behavior baseline. That makes later retakes and cross-layer interpretation easier to read in context rather than in isolation.
