Hermann Rorschach - On November 08, 2013 Google celebrates Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday with an interactive Google Doodle.
On November 8, 2013, on Google's home pages, is a special logo for the 129th birthday of Hermann Rorschach. Hermann Rorschach is most well known for developing the inkblot test.
The interactive Google Doodle, which you can see now on Google Australia (where it is the 8th already) shows various inkblots and asks you to share what you see on Google+, Facebook or Twitter.
Hermann Rorschach was born on November 8, 1884 in Zürich, Switzerland and died at the young age of 37 on April 1, 1922 in Herisau, Switzerland. He was a Swiss Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst best known for his inkblot test for projecting your thoughts.
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Hermann Rorschach Google Doodle - On November 8th 2013 Google celebrates Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday with an interactive Google Doodle.
Hermann Rorschach (8 November 1884, Zürich - 1 April 1922, Herisau) was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. Hermann Rorschach is known for the development of the 'Rorschach inkblot test'.
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There will be a Google Doodle about Hermann Rorschach on 8th November 2013. Hermann Rorschach was a swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. Hermann Rorschach became famous for his Rorschach inkblot test. Some of these inkblots you can see on the interactive Google Doodle. You can even share on facebook, twitter or google+ by clicking the link.
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Hermann Rorschach - On November 08, 2013 Google celebrates Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday with an interactive Google Doodle
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Google Doodle celebrate Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday
Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday
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Hermann Rorschach's 129th birthday is being celebrated by Google through an interactive doodle.
Born on 8 November 1884 in Zurich, Switzerland, Hermann Rorschach was a Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, best known for inventing a projective test known as the Rorschach inkblot test.
The inkblot test - or the Rorschach test - is a psychological test using which a person's interpretations of inkblots are recorded and assessed through psychological interpretation, complex algorithms, or both. The test is used by psychologists to analyse a person's personality traits and emotional functioning. It's also used for detecting underlying thought disorders, especially when individuals are hesitant to talk about their thinking processes openly.
Friday's interactive Google doodle honouring Hermann Rorschach features different inkblot patterns that can be browsed by clicking on them or on the navigation array keys. The doodle also features a 'Share what you see button' that allows you to share your interpretation of the inkblot on Google+, Facebook and Twitter. The doodle also features a sketch of Hermann Rorschach sitting and making notes.
Hermann Rorschach was fond of klecksography, the art of making inkblots since his school days. He later studied under the guidance of eminent psychiatrist Eugen Bleuler. He first started psychoanalysis through inkblots by analysing response of school ch
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Mountain View, California: Google has marked Swiss Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Hermann Rorschach’s 129th birth anniversary with an interactive inkblot doodle.
Rorschach is pictured sitting on a chair with a pen and notepad in the background while a pair of hands is seen holding a paper containing an inkblot in front of the screen.
Users can click on the arrow tabs on either side of the paper to see different inkblots and share their interpretation on Google Plus, Facebook or Twitter.
Born in Zurich, Switzerland on 8 November 1884, Rorschach grew up in Schaffhausen and was known to his friends as Klecks, or 'inkblot' for his love of klecksography, the making of inkblot 'pictures'.
Rorschach enrolled in medical school at the University of Zurich after high school on the advice of German biologist Ernst Haeckel to whom he had written about his predicament of choosing between a career in art and one in science.
While studying medicine, Rorschach started using inkblots as a tool of psychoanalysis as he was intrigued by the differing responses when people are shown the same inkblots.
In 1921, Rorschach published a book called Psychodiagnostik which form the basis of his inkblot test. Although the inkblots were considered scientifically worthless by several psychologists, they were a huge success with the public due to the seemingly astounding behaviour rea
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Hermann Rorschach's inkblot Doodle
On 8th November, Google celebrates the Birthday of Hermann Rorschach with a nice interactive inkblots Doodle.
Hermann Rorschach was a Swiss Freudian psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, best known for developing a projective test known as the Rorschach inkblot test. This test was reportedly designed to reflect unconscious parts of the personality that project onto the stimuli. In the test, individuals are shown 10 inkblots and asked to report what objects or figures they see in each of them.
Rorschach was born in Zürich and spent his childhood and youth in Schaffhausen, in northern Switzerland. He became known to his high school friends as Klecks, or inkblot since, like many other young people in his native country, he enjoyed klecksography, the making of fanciful inkblot pictures. Unlike his classmates, however, Rorschach would go on to make inkblots his life's work.
The Doodle Shows some inkblots, what have you seen?
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Hermann Rorschach Google Doodle - On November 8th 2013 Google celebrates Hermann Rorschach's 129th Birthday with an interactive Google Doodle.
Hermann Rorschach (8 November 1884, Zürich - 1 April 1922, Herisau) was a Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst. Hermann Rorschach is known for the development of the 'Rorschach inkblot test'.
Technology video | 706 views
Google Doodle für Hermann Rorschach zum 129. Geburtstag am 8. November 2013
Musik: Eigene Improvisation.
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