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free association
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free association

In psychoanalysis, a therapeutic technique developed by Sigmund Freud in which the patient is encouraged to repeat whatever comes to mind without reservation. Freud claimed that, in the patient's unforced statements, unconscious wishes were unwittingly revealed, allowing analysis to proceed where the resistance or repression usually manifest in personal disclosure would otherwise interfere.

The process of free association, which is still widely used in psychoanalysis today, is generally facilitated by the nonemotive prompting of the analyst.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Left without any visual component to consider, visitors free-associate in an environment usually reserved for images and not sounds.
It's a slow, elegant ballad with lyrics that free-associate wildly, but what makes it arresting is the musical accompaniment: The setting is a faint, sketchy outline, not a walloping production.
When performing under the Brainstorming action, each player may be asked to free-associate on topics ranging from frozen food to 80s pop television.
 
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