Bored
Have you ever wondered how boredom works? Do all people experience it in the same way? Can your cat get bored?
Technically, the mechanism behind boredom is very simple. You receive data from your inputs, find patterns, and save them. More data gives you more patterns. Then more. And more. At some moment you hit the limit. Everything that you see from now on fits into already available patterns in your memory.
This is where you get bored. You saw everything.
All species that work with pattern recognition should be affected. Of course, some of them may be so slow that one lifetime wouldn't be enough to study their neighborhood, and some wouldn't have enough memory for symbols, but all the smart ones, with good hardware, will become bored eventually.
We can totally live with that. If you understand everything that you see, and your programs work exactly as you expect, then what's the problem? It's a default reaction that comes directly from the most primal version of a reality checker.
But no rest for the wicked. Some of us have a program to make changes. And if you try to change things, they'll likely be changed. It's hard to mess that up in our world. It would look appropriate to keep such a reliable program in your toolbox.
When you get bored, that rebellious program pushes you to roll a die and try something new. Just because. Just to see what happens. This is where your chaotic free will comes into play.
However, despite the fact that we have collective unconscious, we can cover the same environment with slightly different sets of symbols, and get in and out of boredom in various ways.
There are two main approaches that you may choose to get out. You can literally move, travel, and surround yourself with new things, or you can look for details in familiar environments. As Sherlock Holmes says, you see, but you don't observe!
But, regardless of that choice, first discoveries will always fit in your previous knowledge, and what's important for us, in your patterns of behavior. It's inevitable, because you look for new things while still using your old programs.
Where consumers (14) will find new purchases, flavors in food, and unconventional ways to get pleasure in general, artists (6) will see new creative ideas and puzzles to solve.
You could learn a lot about people's current behavior just by studying what they notice first when they become bored.