naive+subject

toc = Definition: = A person who has agreed to participate in an experiment but is not aware that deception is being used to conceal its real purpose. Gen Psych, Chapter 14, Pg. 448

= Examples: = In Milgram's experiment, the teacher was the naive subject because he didn't know that he was the real subject in this experiment, not the learner.

= Analogies: = [insert analogies here] (give one or more analogies in place of the bracketed text above, then delete these instructions. Please do not delete instructions unless you are adding something to this section. If you don't know of any analogies, leave this section unchanged for someone else to improve on. See Sample Page for a definition and an example of an analogy.)

= Mnemonics: = [insert mnemonics here] (give a mnemonic in place of the bracketed text above, then delete these instructions. Please do not delete instructions unless you are adding something to this section. If you don't know of any mnemonics, leave this section unchanged for someone else to improve on. See Sample Page for a definition and an example of a mnemonic.)

=In the News:= [insert news stories here] (give one or more news stories--preferably with links or video and a short summary or blurb--in place of the bracketed text above, then delete these instructions. Please do not delete instructions unless you are adding something to this section. If you don't know any or don't have time to find any, leave this section unchanged for someone else to improve on. See Sample Page for more information on formatting, to see examples, and for further instructions.)

=Discussion Area:= Start a discussion by clicking at the top of the page. Click on a subject below to see what people are saying and join a discussion. This is the area for in-depth discussion of: include component="comments" page="Naive Subject" limit="10"
 * location of a page elements
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 * improving analogies and mnemonics.