Cognitive inhibition and Rorschach human movement responses.

Abstract
93 Ss were given the Rorschach and a task which was designed to measure the "efficiency of cognitive inhibition." Individuals who are more responsive to kinesthetic stimuli in the Rorschach are better able to inhibit associations than are those who are not productive of M responses. The authors believe that the findings "lend further support to the triadic hypothesis interrelating motor behavior, motion perception, and cognitive processes.".

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: