3D Visualizer
3D Visualizers can use 2D representations of the world, like maps or blueprints, to create 3D models in their minds and are sometimes called structural thinkers.
>Description :
3D Visualizers can use 2D representations of the world, like maps or blueprints, to create 3D models in their minds and are sometimes called structural thinkers. They are usually adept at adjusting these models as more information becomes available. They have a distinct advantage over others when projects require reorganization or physical placement. Their ability to visualize spatially allows them to understand blueprints, drawings, and maps easily and without having to rotate them physically. They can visualize how objects would most effectively be organized in a given space. Often they process information by drawing diagrams to understand new concepts quickly; pictures, tables, and figures clarify information for them better than written text does. They like to work with and think about real things such as tools, products, or buildings.
>Easier :
1.Adapting existing buildings or landscapes for new uses
2.Playing interactive video games and solving a Rubik's Cube
3.Developing playbooks and coaching athletic teams in route patterns
>Difficult :
1.Acknowledging that others might not understand you
2.Following the plot of a story that lacks imagery or a movie that has not been well edited for scene cuts
3.Counseling others
4.Using nontechnical language during meetings
>Results Show :1.You have the ability to visualize in 3D and to rotate a solid object in your mind.
2. You’re a natural for work with concrete objects placed in physical space, like architecture, engineering, carpentry, and sculpture.
3.We bet you’re happiest doing projects that produce a tangible outcome.
4.You have an advantage in work like interior design, dance choreography, and crime scene reconstruction.
5.The one thing you shouldn’t do is ignore this aptitude: you’ll seriously miss it if you do.
>Aptitude Awareness :
When packing your vehicle, you prefer to pack in a way that uses all the space. You may position everything in the order that makes unloading easy and pack key items you may need where you'll have immediate access to them. You generally handle new information well as long as it doesn't distract from the project you were originally asked to create or from the situation you are in at the moment. You may enjoy learning how mechanical, biological, and natural systems function: for example, a bicycle, digestive system, or ecosystem.
>Tips :
1.This aptitude's also an appetite. Make sure you find ways to feed it, if not at work then elsewhere. Find a hobby. Or volunteer: your community can use your gift.
2.Use your spatial gift even when you're not working with space. Create diagrams or other visual representations of complex stories or plans.
3.Packing and organizing efficiently is second nature to you. Take our advice: when it comes to family vacations, just pack the car yourself.
4.Set up that garage workshop. Outfit that corner craft table. Choose an outlet: you have the gift, now have the fun.