Relacionar Columnas History research termsVersión en línea Match the terms to their definitions por Ruth North 1 Factoid 2 Derivative record 3 Analysis 4 Repository 5 Primary information 6 Secondary information 7 Verification 8 Source 9 Assumption 10 Best evidence 11 Abstract 12 Claim 13 Inference 14 Confirm 15 Methodology 16 Proof 17 Correlate 18 Citation 19 Fact 20 Assertion 21 Manuscript 22 Annotated bibliography 23 Evidence 24 Speculation An original record or records of the best and highest quality that survives. A conclusion backed by thorough research, sound analysis, and reliable evidence. The process of examining evidence, e.g. studying individual pieces of data for inherent clues, strengths, and weaknesses. To compare and contrast separate items in order to identify conflicts and agreements between them and to define patterns and relationships. A presumed reality—an event, circumstance, or other detail that is considered to have happened or to be true. Details provided by someone with only second-hand (hearsay) knowledge of the facts. A “fact” that is fictitious or unsubstantiated but repeatedly asserted to promote its acceptance. Material produced by copying an original record or manipulating its content e.g. compendiums, compilations, databases and translations. The statement in which one identifies the source of an assertion. An artifact, book, document, film, person, recording, website, etc., from which information is obtained. A piece of writing in its native, unpublished state. Derived from the Latin meaning written by hand. An opinion unsupported by evidence. Section of a report detailing how research was undertaken. An assertion for which no evidence is supplied or else the evidence is insufficient. A statement made or details provided by someone with first- hand knowledge of the facts he or she asserted. A claim or statement of “fact.” A premature conclusion unsupported by evidence. A bibliography which discusses the sources, as well as providing a full reference for them. A 150 to 250 word paragraph that provides an overview of the report. Confirming the accuracy of an assertion by consulting other authoritative and independent sources. An archive, government office, library, or other facility where research materials are held. Information or assertions that are relevant to the research problem. To test the accuracy of an assertion or conclusion by (a) consulting at least one other source. A “fact” deduced from information that implies something it does not state outright.