释义 |
mediated, ppl. a.|ˈmiːdɪeɪtɪd| [f. prec. + -ed1.] Interposed, intervening. Also Psychol., arrived at by mediation; involving mediation (mediation 3 b).
1832Austin Jurispr. (1879) II. 926 The right or duty is not created or divested by a law without the intervention of a fact distinct from the law itself but is really created or divested by a law through a mediated or intervening fact. 1942Cofer & Foley in Psychol. Rev. XLIX. 514 A theoretical analysis of mediated generalization as a specific conditioned response phenomenon. 1950Keller & Schoenfeld Princ. Psychol. v. 161 (caption) Mediated generalization in the conditioning of the galvanic skin response to verbal stimuli. 1971A. Paivio Imagery & Verbal Processes ix. 319 Mediated transfer studies generally involve the learning of two or more lists. |