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Talk:Activity-specific approach in temperament research

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by SvSpar (talk | contribs) at 20:27, 27 September 2016. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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This article was accepted from this draft on 27 April 2016 by reviewer 333-blue (talk · contribs).
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I removed the tag COI| as this is one of the cases that only competent experts can make this contribution, and this expert is indeed related to latest stages of development of this theory. The theory itself, however, was not offered by the contributor iratrofimov, considering the text of the article and citations. The theory was initiated in 1970s, developed in 1980-90s, and was simply used and not adjusted any further by this contributor.KaiStr (talk) 00:02, 2 September 2016 (UTC)[reply]

"Why it doesn't meet the notability guideline? And why does it have a tag on " excessive amount of intricate detail"? The theory came within a notable institution under the Russian Academy of Sciences and was used as a very popular psychological test Structure of Temperament Questionnaire. Nowadays we still can see old theories in references and old temperament or personality tests in use, such as Eysenck's or MMPI, even though they appeared have less correlations with psychophysiology than Rusalov's test. At least Rusalov's test is still in use, including Canada and Australia, and the activity-specific approach is still being learned in temperament research in North America. The details described on the page are rather basic, and share very notable idea that physical and social actions are regulated by different systems in the brain. This is not very complex, at least less complex than some Wikepedia pages on thermodynamics."