Tuesday, 18 February 2020

NAREK



An elicitation technique is any of a number of data collection techniques used in anthropology, cognitive science, counseling, education, knowledge engineering, linguistics, management, philosophy, psychology, or other fields to gather knowledge or information from people. Elicitation, in which knowledge is sought directly from human beings, is usually distinguished from indirect methods such as gathering information from written sources.1

A person who interacts with human subjects in order to elicit information from them may be called an elicitor, an analyst, experimenter, or knowledge engineer, depending on the field of study.

Elicitation techniques include interviews, observation of either naturally occurring behavior (including as part of participant observation) or behavior in a laboratory setting, or the analysis of assigned tasks.












NAREK :
Dr. Asha? I don't mean to intrude.
I'm Narek.
I'm new here.

Dr. SOJI ASHA :
Soji.

NAREK :

That's a beautiful name.
I've been reading about your work.
It's-it's fascinating.
I feel like I've got so many questions.

Dr. SOJI ASHA :
And I feel like you're about to ask them.


NAREK :

That's nice.
Your necklace.

Dr. SOJI ASHA :
Uh, my father made it.
One for me and one for my sister.
I'm a twin.

NAREK :
Oh.
I had a brother.
Not a twin, but we were really close.
We, um we lost him last year.
Very unexpected.
You're lucky to have her.
I'm sorry.
You spend your day fixing broken people.
I'm guessing the last thing you want when you get off work is to listen to another sad story.

Dr. SOJI ASHA :
Guess again.

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