Association disorder

Associativity refers to the psychological process of thinking about or recalling something and thinking about other related things (that is, one concept causes another concept). The essence of association is conditioned reflex, which is a neural connection established because things often appear simultaneously or one after the other. Lenovo includes close association, similar association, contrast association, relational association, free association and control association. The most commonly used approach is association. Things in association are close to each other in time or space. Controlling association is to actively control the direction of association and associate it towards a certain goal. This association is limited by the level of knowledge and the agility of thinking. In contrast, free association is a natural association without any control. Because the knowledge and experience of each person are different, the association produced by the same thing is different. Free association is more common in children. The internal speech used by people in the association process has a concealed, short, and fragmented development process, which may appear incoherent. If the implicit speech is directly expressed, or the mediating process of association is skipped when expressing in the explicit speech, it can be manifested as an association disorder. If you can't make abstract generalization based on the inherent characteristics of things. You cannot distinguish things correctly, and you cannot correctly classify things, and digression will occur in the process of approaching association.

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