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abstract
a summary of a longer piece of writing, or an idea that is not concrete and is based on general concepts
acknowledge
to accept that something is true or exists, or to show appreciation or recognition
acquire
to get or gain something, often through learning or experience
aggregate
a total amount or value made up of smaller parts added together
alternative
a different choice or option that can be used instead of something else
analyze
to carefully study something in order to understand it better
assessment
the act of evaluating or judging the quality, importance, or value of something
assumption
a belief or idea that you accept as true without proof or evidence
bias
a preference or opinion that unfairly affects a person's judgment or decision-making
comprehensive
including all or almost all the necessary details or parts of something
contradict
to say the opposite of what someone else has said, or to show that a statement is not true
criteria
a set of rules or standards that are used to judge or make decisions about something
deduce
to reach a conclusion or decision based on available information or reasoning
demonstrate
to show or prove something clearly by giving evidence or examples
empirical
based on actual experience or observation, rather than on theory or logic
hypothesis
an idea or explanation that is based on limited information and needs to be tested or investigated
implication
a possible effect or result of something, often not clearly stated or considered
justify
to provide a good reason or explanation for something, or to show that it is right or reasonable
manipulate
to control or influence something or someone in a skillful way, often for personal gain
objective
based on facts and not influenced by personal feelings or opinions
phenomenon
a fact or event that is unusual, interesting, or difficult to understand or explain
precede
to come or happen before something else in time, order, or importance
rationale
the underlying reason or explanation for a decision, belief, or action
relevant
closely connected or appropriate to the matter being considered or discussed
scope
the range of things that a subject, activity, or situation includes or deals with
subjective
based on personal feelings, opinions, or experiences, rather than on facts or evidence
synthesis
the process of combining different ideas, pieces of information, or elements to form a new and complete whole
validity
the quality of being logically or factually sound, or the extent to which something is true and can be believed
variable
something that can change or be different in different situations
verify
to check or prove that something is true, accurate, or correct