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  1. Sep 3, 2021 · Associative looseness, also known as derailment, refers to a thought-process disorder characterized by a lack of connection between ideas. Associative looseness often results in vague and confusing speech, in which the individual will frequently jump from one idea to an unrelated one.

  2. Loose associations refer to a cognitive phenomenon in which thoughts and ideas are loosely connected or unrelated in a person’s speech or thinking. It is commonly observed in individuals with certain mental health conditions, particularly those associated with thought disorders.

    • Definition of Loose Associations
    • History
    • Examples of Loose Associations
    • Therapy
    • Further Reading
    • References

    When asked to define loose associations in psychology one can tell that it is a formal thought disorder characterized by a lack of association between different ideas resulting in disorganized thinking. A person with loosened associationsspeaks and writes sentences that are difficult to understand. People with this disorder face extreme difficulty ...

    Over the course of time, different psychologists have used various terminologies to refer to the disturbance of thought that today we know as derailment. A summary of different terminologies is given in the table below.

    We can better understand the loose associations thought process with the help of examples. A person with loose associations speaks sentences like these. 1. “I like to dance, all people have hands.” 2. “I like to play games because the river is flowing down a mountain.” 3. “The weather is sunny, the monkey has a long tail.” You can easily notice tha...

    The diagnosis of loose associations is made by a psychiatrist after a detailed mental status evaluation of a patient. Loose associations are not a diseaseby itself, rather it is a manifestation of an underlying mental disorder. It can sometimes be an important clue to the psychiatrist in making a diagnosis of a psychotic disorder such as schizophre...

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    Davies, G. (2004). Symptoms in the Mind. An Introduction to Descriptive Psychopathology (3rd edn). British Journal of Psychiatry, 184, 461 – 461.
    Thompson, T., Mathias, P., & Lyttle, J. (1994). Lyttle’s mental health and disorder. London … [et al.: Baillie��re Tindall.
    Spillane, R., & Martin, J. (2005). Personality and performance: Foundations for managerial psychology. Sydney: Unsw Press.
    Sadock, B. J., Sadock, V. A., Ruiz, P., & Kaplan, H. I. (2017). Kaplan and Sadock’s comprehensive textbook of psychiatry (10th ed.). Wolters Kluwer.
  3. Apr 17, 2023 · This study provides the first biological evidence for the “loosening of associations” theory of schizophrenia and may potentially be used to understand the biological basis of other mental...

  4. Jan 1, 2018 · The illogicality of the loosening of associations which is found in schizophrenia should be contrasted with the flight of ideas which characterises hypomania. Loosening of associations is also called knight's move thinking.

  5. Loose associations, also known as derailment, is a thought disorder characterized by difficulty in creating and expressing coherent thought, which outward manifests as the production of disorganized speech.

  6. Mar 10, 2017 · These include, most famously, Bleulers “loosening of the associations” (often interacting with various affective needs, diminishments, and anomalies), which facilitates “mere fragments” and “aimless erratic thinking” in which “habitual well-worn pathways of association have lost their cohesiveness.” 9 (p352–355)

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