These days, you're more likely to come across the concept of a Rorschach test in a cultural context than a clinical one. The actual psychological test — in which participants are asked to interpret 10 ...
A bear. A bat. A butterfly. Images seen in Rorschach inkblots reveal the viewer's unconscious mind, including any serious mental disorders. Or do they? Is the Rorschach test a brilliant diagnostic ...
Just after April Fools’ Day in 1922, Hermann Rorschach, a psychologist who used a collection of symmetrical inkblots to treat patients with manic depression and schizophrenia, died of appendicitis in ...
Researchers have unlocked the mystery of why people have seen so many different images in Rorschach inkblots. The image associations—a bat, woman with a ponytail, many different animals, people, a ...
People used to dribble ink and think nothing of it. Then along came Hermann Rorschach who turned inking into thinking. Because Google is an (overly) thinking company, it has decided to honor Rorschach ...
The Leonard Pearlstein Gallery of Drexel University’s Westphal College of Media Arts & Design will open, “What Might this Be?” The Art & Science of Rorschach Inkblots, on Tuesday, Oct. 8 from 5 p.m. – ...
One evening in late March 1922, Hermann Rorschach and his wife attended a staging of Henrik Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt.” “The next morning,” Damion Searls writes in “The Inkblots,” his fine and thorough new ...
Rorschach tests play with the human imagination and our mind's ability to impart meaning onto the world around us – but what does AI see in them? For more than a century, the Rorschach inkblot test ...
These days, you're more likely to come across the concept of a Rorschach test in a cultural context than a clinical one. In a new book, author... How Hermann Rorschach's 'Inkblots' Took On A Life Of ...
“The Inkblots: Hermann Rorschach, His Iconic Test, and the Power of Seeing” (Crown), by Damion Searls A bear. A bat. A butterfly. Images seen in Rorschach inkblots reveal the viewer’s unconscious mind ...