0 past simple and past participle of elicit
1 to get or produce something, especially information or a reaction:
The questionnaire was intended to elicit information on eating habits.
The teacher elicits definitions from the students.
In this teaching practice, teachers elicit and build on their students' mathematical insights.
But there are also welldocumented violations of procedure invariance, where choices are affected by the way in which preferences over the options are elicited.
Instructions and sentences used for the elicited oral translation task.
Spontaneous interaction and elicited production are clearly separated.
The conference elicited a number of distinguished papers, and the proceedings will soon be published.
The possibilities of rationalization and acquiescence exist when self-reports of personal feelings are elicited by an interviewer or selfcompletion questionnaire.
The stimuli were presented to three adults and three typically developing children to ensure that the intended responses were elicited.
It seems that only elicited production will detect a morphological deficit, at least in elementary school children.
As the scope and, hence, the size and complexity of networks are increasing, the need for proper management of the elicited domain knowledge becomes apparent.