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On Writer's Cramp and Other Occupation Neuroses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

W. Burridge*
Affiliation:
Lucknow University
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In a previous communication the subject of training was considered, and the deduction made that a trained act differed from an untrained act in respect of the composition of the excitation processes mediating the act (1). That is to say, though the formula H + L = T can be applied to both the trained and the untrained act, the trained act contains more L and less H than the untrained act. In other words, training adds L and diminishes H (1).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1931 

References

1 Burridge, , Journ. Ment. Sci., 1929, lxxv, p. 371.Google Scholar
2 Idem , ibid., 1929, lxxv, p. 395.Google Scholar
3 Idem , ibid., 1930, lxxvi, p. 96.Google Scholar
4 Idem , ibid., 1930, lxxvi, p. 103.Google Scholar
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