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