
I have not observed any of this (in people typed using Jungian functions). We should also see intuitives as more extraverted overall, and sensors as carrying more of the traits of harm avoidance and heightened neuroticism. If N/S is a proxy for openness then we should see sensors prefer traditional forms of experience, and intuitives prefer novel and exciting forms of experience. experiential traits of sensation and novelty seeking, negative correlation with harm avoidance (excessive worrying pessimism shyness and being fearful, doubtful, and easily fatigued), significant positive correlation with extraversion and crystallized intelligence, etc. However this view weakens when examine openness traits that appear antithetical to the traditional view of intuition, i.e. McCrae commented that Sensation-Intuition axis "contrasts a preference for the factual, simple and conventional with a preference for the possible, complex, and original" and thus measures openness. This is not entirely true but may be close enough for our purposes. The easiest, most reductive way of understanding N/S is as a proxy for openness. Maybe this dimension does not exist, or at least isn't as strong as E/I
Even Jung was quite vague in his conceptualization. The Adventure of the Mistyped Consulting Detective.Multiple Models and Truly Understanding the Types.

You can test it out at kisa.ca, humanmetrics, odiseajung ( en español), mypersonality ( requires registration), or John's Personality Test. Your type however determines the order and attitude of these functions. Additionally, every type uses all four types of functions, Intuition, Sensing, Thinking, and Feeling. The MBTI sorts for type and each type has a specific function order. The MBTI, short for Myers-Briggs Type Indicator, defines 16 types to which each of us belong, according to our preferred cognitive functions.
