Psychology Glossary
Lexicon of Psychology - Terms, Treatments, Biographies,

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Active reason

Active reason refers to the faculty of the soul that searches for the essences or abstract concepts that manifest themselves in the empirical world according to Aristotle. Aristotle thought that the active reason part of the soul was immortal.

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Active rehearsal

Active Rehearsal --->'Cumulative rehearsal'.

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Active schemas

Active schemas refers to cognitive schemas occurring in everyday events;

Active touch

Active touch refers to a kind of touch in which the observer plays an active role in touching and exploring an object, usually with his or her hands.

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Active transport

Active transport is the protein-mediated process that expends energy to pump chemicals from the blood into the brain

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Active voice

Active voice refers to a sentence in which the surface structure subject is also the deep structure or logical subject of the sentence, such as when a mother scolded her child.

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Active-span tasks

Active-span tasks refer to tasks in which research participants are asked to remember materials while simultaneously working on some other task; such tasks are an effective means of measuring working memory 's capacity.

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Activities of daily living

Activities of daily living (ADLs) refers to self-help tasks such as bathing, dressing, and using the toilet.

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