The Cognitive Failures Questionnaire (CFQ) is a self-report inventory of cognitive slippage in the form of failures in everyday actions, perceptions and attention, and memory.
[1] It was developed by Donald Broadbent and others in 1982 at the University of Oxford's Department of Experimental Psychology.
[2][3] The authors originally intended for the questionnaire to measure three distinct factors: perception, memory, and motor function.
Subsequent analysis has found four distinct factors measured, which partially overlap with the intended factors.
[4] One study found that it is correlated with measures of neuroticism, including as measured by the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire, thus supporting the so-called mental-noise hypothesis of neuroticism.