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schizophrenic thinking

pervasive, marked impairment of thinking in terms of loosening of associations and slowness of associations, representing positive symptoms and negative symptoms, respectively, of schizophrenia. Because thinking must be inferred rather than observed, and because no single definition or test or technique of inference has been universally accepted, evaluation is usually limited to examining samples of speech or writing that the individual is inclined to express. On certain psychological tests (e.g., Rorschach, MMPI), schizophrenic thinking is identified deviant verbalizations, which are unusual, exaggerated, or otherwise abnormal responses to items presented during the test, such as inventing a word (see neologism) to describe a Rorschach inkblot. On the Whitaker Index of Schizophrenic Thinking (WIST; 1980), schizophrenic impairment of thinking is defined as simultaneously illogical, impaired, and without apparent awareness, all to a marked degree.

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Psychology term of the day

May 9th 2024

cognitive ethology

cognitive ethology

the study of mental experiences, including consciousness and intentionality, in nonhuman animals and of the influence of these experiences on the animals’ behavior as they interact with their natural environment. Whether, and which, animals actually possess consciousness and intentionality remains a subject of controversy. [proposed in 1978 by U.S. zoologist Donald Redfield Griffin (1915–2003)]