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By C. G. Jung

Contains Jung's recognized word-association stories in basic and irregular psychology, lectures at the organization procedure given in 1909 at Clark college, and 3 articles on psychophysical researches from American and English journals in 1907 and 1908.

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Extra resources for Experimental Researches (The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Volume 2)

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23 [ M a t t e / H r i n g e ~ H d n g e m a l t e , 'hammock,' oiiginalh a hanging mat. ] 26 THE ASSOCIATIONS OF NORMAL SUBJECTS (2) The reaction is essentially only a grammatical variation of the stimulus-word (Wreschner: 28 "Association with inflex­ ional form"). to die kindling to hammer school dead to kindle hammer scholar to find love cab murderer found to love cabby to murder (8) To this should be added a small group of reactions that can be termed anticipatory. Examples: 74 dark red slow 75 light short grandiose small (e) Interjections, which only rarely occur, have been placed in the category of "linguistic-motor connections" although, as Aschaffenburg stresses, they represent a predicate.

The blunting of the reaction in fatigue can easily be accounted for by a decrease of attention. J SPECIAL QUALITY ... "t;l DISTRACTION .... J ::t c t; c... : 14 22 14 4 4 10 32 2 6 54 10 2 40 10 6 10 6 25 6 2 2 3 12 2 7 12 6 8 8 8 Same grammatical form Same number of syllables Alliteration Consonance Same ending 63 52 6 24 13 50 46 4 7 20 62 60 16 35 22 52 44 14 18 20 54 50 12 30 16 70 73 18 47 44 Internal associations 24 31 34 36 18 5 External associations 71 63 36 42 62 52 4 3 29 16 16 26 100 100 100 50 50 100 Sound reactions Number of associations 51 I, STUDIES IN WORD ASSOCIATION that the blunting of the reaction in alcoholic intoxication and manic excitation (observed by Kraepelin's school) is nothing but a symptom of disturbed attention.

In order not to complicate the presen­ tation of the results unnecessarily by a plethora of figures, the graphs published in Part Two reproduce only the figures of the main groups, allowing the extensive material to be grouped more clearly than with a detailed report of the figures for all the sub-groups. For reasons of scientific integrity we considered ourselves obliged to give an exact account of the kind of con­ sideration that led us to the classification of the associations in one or other main group.

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