elicitation
noun [ U ] uk/iˌlɪs.ɪˈteɪ.ʃən/ us/iˌlɪs.əˈteɪ.ʃən/
(尤指信息或反应的)引出,探出,诱出
the process of getting or producing something, especially information or a reaction
We discussed the elicitation of confessions in murder investigations. 我们讨论了谋杀案调查中的诱取口供问题。
He was charged with fraudulent elicitation of sensitive information. 他被指控以欺诈方式诱取敏感信息。
education specialized(在学习上)启发,诱导
the practice of getting a student to provide or remember a fact, response, etc. rather than telling them the answer
techniques used for elicitation in the classroom 在课堂上启发学生的技巧
Many language tests rely on the elicitation strategies described in chapter 7. 许多语言测试都依赖于第七章中所描述的启发策略。
See: elicit
- More examples
- The private elicitation of exculpatory evidence should be disregarded.
- This section of the law applies to any deliberate elicitation of information.
- Elicitation used in language assessment provides examples of how the child uses language.
- Metaphor elicitation exercises are used to discover customers' underlying psychological associations with the product.
- Elicitation procedures make it possible to examine a broad spectrum of linguistic abilities over a short period of time.