
audiobook
by Grace Helen Kent, A. J. (Aaron Joshua) Rosanoff
Produced by Lee Dawei, Dave Maddock and Online Distributed Proofreaders
This work offers a meticulous glimpse into early psychiatric research, following a team of clinicians as they devise a simple yet powerful word‑association test. By presenting a hundred carefully chosen prompts—ranging from “table” to “stomach”—participants are asked to reply with the first word that comes to mind, revealing the hidden pathways of their thoughts. The authors detail how they gathered responses from a remarkably diverse pool of over a thousand individuals, spanning ages, occupations, and cultural backgrounds, to establish a solid baseline of normal associative patterns.
Building on that foundation, the study turns its focus to patients in a state hospital, comparing their responses to the established norm. The authors aim to uncover subtle distortions in the flow of ideas that signal various forms of mental disturbance, all while emphasizing the practicality of conducting the test in ordinary settings. Listeners will find a compelling blend of scientific rigor and human curiosity, offering a window into the early attempts to quantify the mind’s inner workings.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (368K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-10-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1875–1973
A pioneering American psychologist, she helped shape early clinical testing through the Kent-Rosanoff Free Association Test. Her work explored how word associations could reveal patterns in mental illness, making her an important figure in the history of psychology.
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1878–1943
An early 20th-century psychiatrist whose work helped shape discussions of psychosis and mental hygiene, he also stands as a reminder of how closely psychiatry could intersect with the eugenics movement in his era. His writing offers a window into both the ambitions and the blind spots of that period in medical history.
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