Difference between revisions of "Elicitation technique"

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[[Elicitation technique]] (hereinafter, the ''Technique'') is an established [[procedure]] for gathering [[data]] from [[human being]]s. The ''Techniques'' are used in anthropology, cognitive science, counseling, education, knowledge engineering, linguistics, management, philosophy, psychology, and other fields. A person who interacts with human subjects in order to elicit information from them is called an [[elicitor]]. The most common ''Techniques'' include [[interview]]s, [[brainstorming]], [[focus group]]s, [[artifact testing]], [[observation]], and [[questionnaire survey]].
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[[Elicitation technique]] (hereinafter, the ''Technique'') is an established [[procedure]] for gathering [[data]] from [[human being]]s. The ''Techniques'' are used in anthropology, cognitive science, counseling, education, knowledge engineering, linguistics, management, philosophy, psychology, and other fields. A person who interacts with human subjects to elicit information from them is called an [[elicitor]]. The most common ''Techniques'' include [[interview]]s, [[brainstorming]], [[focus group]]s, [[artifact testing]], [[observation]], and [[questionnaire survey]].
  
  

Revision as of 01:42, 28 March 2020

Elicitation technique (hereinafter, the Technique) is an established procedure for gathering data from human beings. The Techniques are used in anthropology, cognitive science, counseling, education, knowledge engineering, linguistics, management, philosophy, psychology, and other fields. A person who interacts with human subjects to elicit information from them is called an elicitor. The most common Techniques include interviews, brainstorming, focus groups, artifact testing, observation, and questionnaire survey.


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