93 
1911-12.] A Method of Measuring Mental Processes. 
depressed, but recovered. Broke down again at the age of 26, and is still 
depressed. 
Case XXX. — Female, aged 37, single. Has been ill since the age of 18. 
Had several attacks of excitement and depression with short lucid intervals 
during which she was well enough to live at home. 
REFERENCES. 
1. Maloney, “On the Reckoning Test and its Uses in Psychiatry,’ 7 Revieiv of 
Neur. and Psych., vol. ix., No. 7, p. 366. 
2. Maloney, Instructions in the Use of the Reckoning Test. 
3. Kraepelin and others, quoted by Maloney, Review of Neur. and Psych., 
vol. ix., No. 7. 
4. “Ueber die Wirkung kurzer Arbeit’s Zeiten,” quoted by J. H. Wimms, 
“Fatigue and Practice,” Brit. Jour . Psychol., \ ol. ii. p. 153 et seq., 1907-1908. 
5. Amberg, Kraepelin’s Psych . Arbeiten, Band i., Seite 336, quoted by Maloney, 
Revieu j of Neur. and Psych., vol. ix., No. 7. 
6. Maloney, ibid., vol. ix., No. 7. 
[Tables. 
