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A Study of Individual Differences and of Interaction in the Behaviour of Some Aspects of Language in Interviews

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2018

F. Goldman-Eisler*
Affiliation:
Medical Research Council Unit for Research in Occupational Adaptation, Maudsley Hospital

Extract

Since the interviewing process, or the process of two people talking to each other is an extremely complex phenomenon, it seemed advisable to begin its analysis at the elementary and quantitative level, by first of all measuring the duration both of periods of continuous speech, and of the pauses and then after investigating their various relations and rhythmic alternation, to work up through grammatical analysis to the more complex phenomena.

Type
Part I.—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1954 

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References

1. Balken, E. R., and Massermann, J. H., “The Language of Phantasy: III. The Language of the Phantasies of Patients with Conversion Hysteria, Anxiety State, and Obsessive-compulsive Neuroses,” J. Psychol., 1940, 10, 7586.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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