| 1. | In absentia | Is Latin for "in the absence". In legal use it usually pertains to a defendant's right to be present in court proceedings. In absentia under USA law : For more than 100 More… 4.7 KB |
| 2. | In vivo | (in Latin); it means that which takes place inside an organism. In science, in vivo refers to experimentation done in or on the living tissue of a whole, living organism as opposed to a More… 1.9 KB |
| 3. | Incentive salience | It occurs when stimuli associated with drug-taking behavior begin reinforcing themselves. Thus, if a person's addiction is extinguished and he is then presented with a stimulus that has More… 1.2 KB |
| 4. | Incest | It refers to any sexual activity between closely related persons that is illegal or socially taboo. The type of sexual activity and the nature of the relationship between persons that More… 1.9 KB |
| 5. | Incest taboo | It refers to the cultural prohibition of sexual activity or marriage between persons defined as "close" relatives - commonly called incest; the degree of which is determined by the More… 0.4 KB |
| 6. | Incidence | Is a measure of the risk of developing some new condition within a specified period of time. Although sometimes loosely expressed simply as the number of new cases during some time period, More… 2.6 KB |
| 7. | Incidental learning | learning that takes place without intent to learn or in the absence of formal instructions. Whether or not incidental learning can occur is of considerable importance for theories of More… 0.5 KB |
| 8. | Incompatibilism | Incompatibilism is the belief that free will and determinism are logically incompatible categories. This could include believing that determinism is reality, therefore free will is an More… 0.4 KB |
| 9. | Incompetent | lacking the necessary ability or qualification properly to carry out a task, In psychiatric literature, incompetence refers to a state characteristic of insane or mentally deficient, are not More… 0.2 KB |
| 10. | Incomplete pictures test | A test of visual organization in which the subject is required to identify a common object presented in a series of successively completed drawings of that object as early in the sequence as More… 0.3 KB |
| 11. | Incongruence | A discrepancy between one's total organismic experience and a self-concept burdened by conditions of worth, resulting in a state of inner tension and confusion. Converse of congruence More… 0.4 KB |
| 12. | Incremental reading | Is a method for learning and retaining information from reading that might otherwise be forgotten. It is particularly targeted to people who are trying to learn a large amount of information More… 2.1 KB |
| 13. | Incubation | in the Gestalt model of problem solving, a process of pausing to actively work on a problem, in order to modify one's mental set. |
| 14. | Independent variable | 1- the variable controlled by the experimenter and applied to the subject in order to determine its effects on the subject's reaction. 2- in simple correlations, the criterion variable More… 0.3 KB |
| 15. | Index case | also called primary case or patient zero is the initial patient in the population sample of an epidemiological investigation. Patient zero is a somewhat less specific term than index case More… 0.9 KB |
| 16. | Indian logic | The development of Indian logic can be said to date back to the anviksiki of Medhatithi Gautama (c. 6th century BCE); the Sanskrit grammar rules of Pāṇini (c. 5th century BCE); the More… 0.5 KB |
| 17. | Individual Psychology | Is a term used specifically to refer to the psychological method or science founded by the Viennese psychologist Alfred Adler. The English edition of Adler's work on the subject (1925) More… 1.3 KB |
| 18. | Individual differences psychology | The science of psychology studies people at three levels of focus captured by the well known quote: “Every man is in certain respects (a) like all other men, (b) like some other men, (c) More… 1.4 KB |
| 19. | Individuation | (Latin: principium individuationis); is a concept which appears in numerous fields and may be encountered in work by Gilbert Simondon, Bernard Stiegler, Gilles Deleuze, Henri Bergson, David More… 1.1 KB |
| 20. | Indonesian philosophy | Indonesian philosophy is generic designation for tradition of abstract speculation held by the people who inhabit the region now known as Indonesia. Indonesian philosophy is expressed in More… 3.2 KB |
| 21. | Inductive reasoning | or Induction, called inductive logic, is the process of reasoning in which the premises of an argument are believed to support the conclusion but do not entail the premises; i.e. they do not More… 1.9 KB |
| 22. | Inductive reasoning aptitude | Inductive reasoning is a measurable aptitude for how well a person can identify a pattern within a large amount of data. Measurement is generally done in a timed test by showing four More… 1.4 KB |
| 23. | Industrial and organizational psychology | Industrial and Organizational Psychology (also called industrial-organizational psychology, I-O psychology, work psychology, work and organizational psychology, occupational psychology, More… 1.4 KB |
| 24. | Industrial psychology | And Organizational Psychology (also known as I/O psychology, work psychology, work and organizational psychology, occupational psychology, personnel psychology or talent assessment) is a More… 1.5 KB |
| 25. | Infantile | 1- pertaining to infancy. 2- characterized by immature, childlike behavior on the part of an older child or adult. |