“…Two of the most widely used projective techniques (Stricker & Somary, 2001) are the Thematic Apperception Test (Murray, 1938)—which includes achromatic drawings on which the individual is asked to create a story using their imagination—and the Rorschach Test (Rorschach, 1921), which consists of a series of inkblots to which the individual is asked to say what it might be . It should be made clear, however, that the idea that Hermann Rorschach developed the test on the basis of projection as a type of defense mechanism is incorrect and untrue (Acklin & Oliveira-Berry, 1996; de Ruiter et al, 2023); the term projection is used only once in the whole of psychodiagnostics and not in a passage describing the nature of the test (Rorschach, 1921). However, some authors believe that the inkblot test promotes idiographic content that might emerge in a dreamlike situation (Aronow et al, 1994), specifically in the night dreaming situation.…”