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20 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
Habituation
The process of adapting to stimuli that do not change.
Classical Conditioning
A procedure in which a neutral stimulus is repeatedly paired with a stimulus that elicts a reflex or other response until the neutral stimulus alone comes to elict a similar response.
Unconditioned Stimulus
A stimulus that elicts a response without conditioning(Meat Powder)
Unconditioned Response
The automatic reaction to a stimulus(Salivation)
Conditioned Stimulus
The original neutral stimulus, through pairing with the unconditioned stimulus, comes to elict a conditioned response(Tuning Fork)
CR
The response that the conditioned stimulus elicts.
Extinction
The gradual disappearance of a conditioned response when a conditioned stimulus no longer predicts he appearance of an UCS.
Reconditioning
The quick relearning of a conditioned response following extinction
Spontaneous Recovery
The reappearance of the CR after extinction and without further classical conditioning(random)
Stimulus generalization
CR is elicted by stimuli that are similar but not identical to the conditioned Stimulus
Stimulus discrimination
A process in which people learn to differentiate among similar sitmuli and respond appropriately to each one.
Forward Conditoning
Neutral stimulus comes before unconditioned stimulus
Backward Conditioning
UCS then Neutral Stimulus
Predictiablilty
Neutral Stimulus will always and only be paired with the UCS
Signal Strength
Stronger stimulus stronger response
Attetion
Be able to control the enviornment
Second Order Conditioning
Conditoned Stimulus acts like an unconditoned stimulus
Law of Effect
Law stating that if a response made in the prescence of a particlular sitmulus is followed by satisfaction, then the response is more likely to occur.
Operant/Intrumental conditioning
Organism Learns to respond to the envioronment in a way that produces positive consequences and avoids negative ones.
Operant
A response that has some effect on the world