selective quoting
Selective quoting refers to the deliberate act of choosing specific portions or phrases from a source, omitting other contextually relevant information that may alter the intended meaning, in order to influence or manipulate the perception of the quoted statement.
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Related Concepts (1)
Similar Concepts
- cherry picking (confirmation bias)
- cherry picking in legal arguments
- cherry-picking data
- cherry-picking evidence
- random sampling
- selective attention
- selective evidence
- selective exposure
- selective hearing
- selective perception
- selective pressure
- selective pressures
- selective quotation and misquoting
- selective reporting
- text summarization