explicit
(adjective)
Very specific, clear, or detailed.
Examples of explicit in the following topics:
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Detail on Types of Long-Term Memory
- Long-term memory consists of conscious explicit (declarative) and unconscious implicit (procedural) memory; both can be stored indefinitely.
- Long Term Memory can be subdivided into different types based on whether the information is conscious (i.e., explicit) or unconscious (i.e., implicit) to the individual .
- Explicit memory, also known as conscious or declarative memory, involves memory for facts, concepts and events that require conscious recall of the information.
- Explicit memory can be further sub-divided into semantic memory, which concerns facts, and episodic memory, which concerns primarily personal or autobiographical information.
- In contrast to explicit (conscious) memory, implicit memory involves procedures for completing actions.
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Long-Term Memory
- Long-term memory can be broken down into two categories: explicit and implicit memory.
- Explicit memory, also known as conscious or declarative memory, involves memory of facts, concepts, and events that require conscious recall of the information.
- Explicit memory can be further subdivided into semantic memory, which concerns facts, and episodic memory, which concerns primarily personal or autobiographical information.
- In contrast to explicit (conscious) memory, implicit (also called "unconscious" or "procedural") memory involves procedures for completing actions.
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Compliance
- "Compliance" refers to a response, specifically a submission, made in reaction to an implicit or explicit request.
- The request may be explicit (directly stated) or implicit (subtly implied); the target may or may not recognize that he or she is being urged to act in a particular way.
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Introduction to the Process and Types of Memory
- Explicit or declarative memory requires conscious recall; it consists of information that is consciously stored or retrieved.
- Explicit memory can be further subdivided into semantic memory (facts taken out of context, such as "Paris is the capital of France") and episodic memory (personal experiences, such as "When I was in Paris, I saw the Mona Lisa").
- In contrast to explicit/declarative memory, there is also a system for procedural/implicit memory.
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The Role of Attention in Memory
- There are two main types of attentional capture: explicit and implicit.
- Explicit attentional capture is when a stimulus that a person has not been attending to becomes salient enough that the person begins to attend to it and becomes cognizant of its existence.
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Obedience
- Obedience is a form of social influence that occurs when a person yields to explicit instructions or orders from an authority figure.
- It occurs when a person yields to explicit instructions or orders from an authority figure.
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Attitudes
- Psychologists believe that attitudes can be either explicit (deliberately formed) or implicit (unconsciously formed).
- Explicit attitudes are deliberately formed attitudes that an individual is aware of having, and they can be measured by self-report and questionnaires.
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Attitude and Health
- Some attitudes are explicit (i.e., deliberately formed) while others are implicit (i.e., unconscious or outside of awareness).
- Implicit and explicit attitudes both affect people's behavior, though in different ways.
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Abnormal Psychology
- Nevertheless, the diagnostic criteria in the DSM are more explicit than those of any other system, which makes the DSM system highly desirable for both clinical diagnosis and research.
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Standardized Tests
- Students respond to the same questions, receive the same directions, and have the same time limits, and the tests are scored according to explicit, standard criteria.