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

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Glossary E

Extent

English: extent / Español: alcance / Português: extensão / Français: étendue / Italiano: estensione

The term "extent" in psychology refers to the degree, range, or scope of a particular phenomenon, behavior, or mental process. It is used to describe how far something extends or the limits within which it operates. Understanding the extent of psychological concepts helps researchers and practitioners gauge the impact and reach of various factors influencing human behavior and cognition.

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External attribution

External attribution refers to the the inference that a person is behaving a certain way because of something about the situation he or she is in; the assumption is that most people would respond the same way in that situation

External justification

External justification refers to a person's reason or explanation for his or her dissonant behavior that resides outside the individual.

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External aids

External aids refer to memory aids that rely on environmental resources, such as notebooks or calendars

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External cause

External cause is defined as a cause of behavior that is assumed to lie outside a person.

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External frames of reference

External frames of reference it is when a child evaluates his or her own performance in light of parent, teacher, or peer feedback and observations of the performance of other children in the class.

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External inhibition

External inhibition is defined as a decrease in the strength of the conditioned response due to the presentation of a novel stimulus at the same time as the conditioned stimulus.

External invalidity

External invalidity refers to the possibility that conclusions drawn from experimental results may not be generalizable to the "real" world. Please see Internal invalidity.

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