释义 |
ˈpsychogram|ps-, ˈsaɪkəgræm| 1. [f. psycho- + -gram.] A ‘spirit-writing’; a writing or message supposed to come from a spirit, or to be produced by psychical agency.
1885in Pember Earth's Earliest Ages (1893) Pref. 13 Pains in the lower part of the back, which cease as soon as the psychogram is completed. 1896Dublin Rev. Apr. 426 This psychogram, as Mr. Rogers calls it, certainly competes in interest with the now famous skeleton hand of Professor Röntgen. 2. Psychol. [ad. G. psychogramm (W. Stern Differentielle Psychol. (1911) iii. xxii. 327).] A summary or diagram of someone's personality, esp. one based on his psychological history, responses to tests, etc.
1918J. Ward Psychol. Princ. xviii. 433 It will be possible to construct what has been called a psychogram of the concrete individual. 1924Jrnl. Nerv. & Mental Dis. LX. 227 Neither was it possible to mention so much of the history of the disease as would have been necessary to prove..the correctness of the psychogram. 1935H. Read in Social Credit Pamphleteer xii. 13 The æsthetic criterion is overcome by the force of the creative invention; the picture becomes a ‘psychogram’. 1948L. Spitzer Linguistics & Lit. Hist. 15 Linguistic deviations, of which the philologist may take stock in order to build up his ‘psychogram’ of the individual artist. |