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Classical conditioning

Published on Feb 04, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Classical conditioning

Conditioning a response to a stimulus
Photo by Greencolander

before conditioning

  • Food -----> Salivation
  • The dog naturally responds to seeing food with salivation.

food =Salivation

the dog is hungry, the dog sees food, the dog salivates.
Photo by MShades

during condtioning

  • Bell (introduced stimulus) with Food ---> Salivation
  • The dog salivates while seeing the food and hearing the bell

bell + food = salivation

every time the dog sees food, the dog also hears the bell.

after conditioning

  • Bell -----> Salivation
  • The dog responds to just hearing the bell with salivation

bell =salivation

dog associates bell with food and produces salivation
Photo by FootAJ

key concepts

  • Unconditional Stimulus: a thing that can already elicit a response.
  • Unconditioned Response: a thing that is already elicited by a stimulus.
  • Unconditioned Relationship: an existing stimlus-response connection.

key concepts continued

  • Conditioned Relationship: a new stimulus we deliver the same time we give the old stimulus.
  • Conditioned Relationship: the new stimulus-response relationship we created by associating a new stimulus with an old response.

Where did your hair go master?

Summary

  • Classical Conditioning is taking an unconditioned relationship between a stimulus and a response and introducing a new stimulus to get the old response.