Study a Person Using their Cinema Seat Selection
Your Cinema Seat Selection links with your Personality
Study a person character using his/her Cinema seat selection
Cinema seat choice can define your personality
WHEN you pick a seat at the movies, you're broadcasting your
personality type to the world.
That's the conclusion of Japanese psychologist Hiromi
Mizuki, who has broken down the average cinema into six seating sections and
outlined a personality type for each.
According to Dr. Mizuki broke down a cinema, or movie
theater, seating into six sections:
1. Center
front rows: People who sit in the front rows are sociable
and want to feel connected with other people.
2. Front
corners: These people accept being inconvenienced. Since these
people usually yield to the wants and desires of others, “Mizuki warns that
people may take advantage of [their] weakness.”
3. Center
rows: People who like to sit in the center of movie theaters are
supposed to be confident and decisive.
4. Middle
row sides: These people crave personal space and only gravitate
towards those they feel they can be themselves with.
5. Center
back rows: People who sit in the center back rows are clam, collected,
timid, and afraid of being influenced by others.
6. Back
corners: People who sit in the back corners want to know everything
that’s going on without getting involved (out of lack of confidence).
Human personality is complex and cannot be “analyzed” with
simple behaviors such as where we choose to sit in a movie theater, the way we
sleep, or the way we eat freaking Oreos.
There are so many factors that influence our decisions in
different situations. Maybe I chose to sit near the edges because I had an
upset stomach that day. Maybe I chose to sit in the front row because I
couldn’t find parking space, or because the employees at McDonalds took forever
making my bacon-stuffed burger and I arrived late to the movie. Or maybe I
chose to sit in the back corners because I was on a date and I wanted to fool
around with her.
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