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If someone exhibits circumstantial speech during a conversation, they will often seem to "talk the long way around" to their point, which may be an attempt by the speaker to include pertinent details, that may contrast with the speech which is more direct, succinct, and to the point (the gist) even
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A person with circumstantiality has slowed thinking and invariably talks at length about irrelevant and trivial details (i.e., circumstances). Eliciting information from such a person can be difficult since circumstantiality makes it hard for the individual to stay on topic. In most instances
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An example of circumstantial speech is that when asked about the age of a person's mother at death, the speaker responds by talking at length about accidents and how too many people die in accidents, then eventually says what the mother's age was at death.
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in which the speaker wanders and drifts and usually never returns to the original topic, and is far less severe than
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169:"Circumstantiality", Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; January 16, 2019, by Kripa Balaram; Raman Marwaha
178:"Signs and symptoms of acute mania: a factor analysis." BMC Psychiatry, Aug. 19, 2011, Hanwella R, de Silva VA
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at the expense of more precise, accurate communication. Circumstantial speech is more direct than
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Childhood
Epilepsy: Language, Learning And Behavioural Complications
149:(32nd ed.). Saunders/Elsevier. 2 May 2011. p. 364.
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by Julius Bourke, Matthew Castle, Alasdair D. Cameron 2008
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Seemingly tangential discussion that returns to the point
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however, the relevant details are eventually achieved.
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147:Dorland's illustrated medical dictionary
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64:Treatment often involves the use of
208:Svobada, William (April 5, 2004).
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252:Obsessive–compulsive disorder
100:Auditory processing disorder
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188:Crash Course: Psychiatry
126:Problem-Based Psychiatry
247:Communication disorders
66:behavioral modification
22:, also referred to as
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128:by Ben Green 2009
42:Signs and symptoms
257:Thought disorders
32:tangential speech
24:circumstantiality
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105:Verbosity
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84:See also
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95:Agnosia
90:Aphasia
51:Example
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