Results 81 to 90 of about 168 (118)
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Freudian Slips

World Policy Journal, 2018
Fil: Plotkin, Mariano Ben. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas. Oficina de Coordinacion Administrativa Parque Centenario. Centro de Investigaciones Sociales. Instituto de Desarrollo Economico y Social.
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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.
Gregg Collins, Lawrence Birnbaum
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An Account of the Freudian Slip in Reading and Writing

Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1974
In our efforts to more effectively communicate, the Freudian slip is one phenomenon that frequently reminds us that we are imperfect communicators. We don't always mean what we say or say what we mean. This paper is a sequel to “An Analysis of the Freudian Slip and Errors in Speech Communication,” which appeared in the October, 1972, issue of this ...
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An Analysis of the Freudian Slip and Errors in Speech Communication

Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1972
The Freudian slip is a common, yet little understood, phenomenon of speech communication. Though we can usually identify a slip easily, most of us are unfamiliar with how, why, and where the slip occurs. In all of his writings Freud never addressed himself to the Freduian slip per se.
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Some Caveats on Testing the Freudian Slip Hypothesis

1992
This chapter reports on a long-term research program intended to apply the new techniques of slip induction to the classical problem of Freudian slips. We will discuss the program’s rationale, early encouraging evidence, and two flawed attempts at systematic replication. These difficulties do not directly contradict the earlier positive results, so far;
Bernard J. Baars   +3 more
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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
Bernard J. Baars, Michael T. Motley
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Laboratory Verification of “Freudian” Slips of the Tongue as Evidence of Prearticulatory Semantic Editing

Annals of the International Communication Association, 1978
Earlier research has shown that spoonerisms (e.g., wage rate → rage wait) can be elicited by a laboratory technique in which subjects attempt to articulate a target (wage rate) preceded by biasing ...
Michael T. Motley, Bernard J. Baars
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Eine experimentelle Studie zur Freudschen Theorie der Fehlleistungen

PPmP - 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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Salvador Dalíí's Lobsters: Feast, Phobia, and Freudian Slip

Gastronomica, 2009
Rational thinking was anathema for Salvador Dalíí, as for all surrealists. They rejected it, pursuing instead what was unreasonable, beyond reason. So, not in spite of but because of the incongruity of the association and its illogic, Dalíí combined lobsters and telephones in several works.
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PERSONALITY AND SITUATIONAL INFLUENCES UPON VERBAL SLIPS: A LABORATORY TEST OF FREUDIAN AND PREARTICULATORY EDITING HYPOTHESES

Human Communication Research, 1979
Earlier studies of laboratory-induced verbal slips have demonstrated the existence of a “prearticulatory editing” phase of speech/language production, the supposed function of which is to evaluate the linguistic integrity of phoneme sequences destined for articulation, allowing articulation of linguistically legitimate sequences, and preventing ...
Michael T. Motley   +2 more
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