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[An experimental study on freudian slips].

Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik, medizinische Psychologie, 2002
We attempted to replicate findings of a frequently cited study by Motley. This author had used a tachistoskope to present his participants pairs of words which had a meaning after exchanging the initial letters of each word ("spoonerisms"). In accordance with the psychoanalytic theory of Freudian slips, Motley was able to show that under the impression
Thomas, Köhler, Patrick, Simon
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Opportunistic Planning and Freudian Slips

1992
Freud’s study of the psychology of errors (see, e. g., Freud, 1935), including notably slips of the tongue, led him to the conclusion that many such errors are not merely the result of random malfunctions in mental processing, but rather are meaningful psychological acts.
Lawrence Birnbaum, Gregg Collins
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Effects of Cognitive Set Upon Laboratory Induced Verbal (Freudian) Slips

Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1979
Subjects participated in either of three treatments of a task which elicits verbal slips. With equal chance probabilities of eliciting verbal slips related either to electricity or to sex, subjects receiving a situational cognitive set toward electric shocks made more electricity-type verbal slips than sex-type errors, while the opposite was true for a
M T, Motley, B J, Baars
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Freudian Slips in Plautus: Two Case Studies

American Journal of Philology, 2007
This paper examines the "Freudian" dimensions of two instances of psycholinguistic performance error in Plautus' comedies, viz., a slip of the tongue in Rudens 422 and a tip-of-the-tongue situation in Trinummus 906–22. In each case, I argue, the error serves as a vehicle for puns and ironic jokes.
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Freudian Slips

World Policy Journal, 2018
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Freudian Slips

The Journal of Psychiatry & Law, 1994
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[Slip technique, process dissociation model and multinomial modeling: new tools for experimental detection of "Freudian slips"].

Zeitschrift fur experimentelle Psychologie : Organ der Deutschen Gesellschaft fur Psychologie, 1997
The study reported here was conducted as a test of the so-called "weak Freudian hypothesis", which claims that unconscious thoughts are relevant for the generation of speech errors. Spoonerisms were induced experimentally using the so-called SLIP technique.
A, Bröder, J, Bredenkamp
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