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Pages 210-214 By Curtis Olsen and Cory Szakal
CLASSIC CONDITIONING Pages By Curtis Olsen and Cory Szakal
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Learning: a relatively permanent change in behavior, knowledge, capability, and attitude
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The 6 Principles of Classical Conditioning
The 6 principles of Classical Conditioning are: Acquisition Stimulus Generalization Stimulus Discrimination Extinction Spontaneous Recovery And High-Order Conditioning.
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Acquisition Neutral stimulus (NS) and unconditioned stimulus (UCS) are paired. Neutral stimulus (NS) turns into a conditioned stimulus (CS) causing a conditioned response (CR). Example: Being scared (CR) to go to the dentist (CS) by connecting it with a painful tooth-pulling (UCS).
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Conditioning Delayed conditioning: The neutral stimulus is shown before the unconditioned stimulus and stays until the unconditioned response starts, and yields the fastest learning. Backward conditioning: The unconditioned stimulus is shown before neutral stimulus. This is less effective.
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Conditioning Continued
Forward conditioning: Occurs when the neutral stimulus appears just before and during the presentation of the unconditioned stimulus. Trace conditioning: Relies on memory - it is when the presentation of the neutral stimulus ceases before the arrival of the unconditioned stimulus.
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Stimulus Generalization
A conditioned response (CR) is brought out by conditioned stimulus (CS) and by stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus (CS). Example: You learn to fear the dentists’ office and places that smell like them.
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Stimulus Discrimination
Certain stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus don’t bring out the conditioned response. Example: You learn the physician’s office isn’t connected to the painful tooth-pulling.
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Extinction Conditioned stimulus is presented alone, without the unconditioned stimulus. Eventually the conditioned stimulus no longer brings out the conditioned response. Example: You go back to the dentist for a check-up, with no pain or tooth-pulling, and your fear slowly disappears.
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Spontaneous Recovery Sudden reappearance of a conditioned response that was previously gone. Example: While watching a movie depicting a dentist performing oral surgery, your fear temporarily returns suddenly.
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High-Order Conditioning
Neutral stimulus becomes conditioned stimulus after being paired with previous conditioned stimulus repeatedly. Example: When you crave fast-food after seeing a billboard advertisement.
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