PSYCH 1X03 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING

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49 Terms

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2 types of unconscious learning

classical conditioning and instrumental conditioning

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Classical Conditioning

learning a contingency between a particular signal and a later event that are paired in time and/or space

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Classical Conditioning vs Instrumental Conditioning

Classical conditioning allows us to associate 2 related events

Instrumental conditioning allows us to associate actions and consequences

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Latent Learning

experimentally we can observe the effects of learned behaviour that is not yet reflected in performance

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Pavlov's experiment

sounded a bell while presenting food to a dog, thereby stimulating the natural flow of saliva in the dog's mouth

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Conditional Reflex

conditional stimulus (CS) elicits a conditional response (CR)

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Contingency

formed when conditioned stimulus reliably predicts the unconditioned stimulus

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Example of contingency

A flash of lightning predicts thunder

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Unconditional

occurs naturally, prior to any learning

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Unconditional Stimulus (US)

stimulus that automatically triggers a response, in absence of any learning

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Example of Unconditional Stimulus (US)

Food placed in dogs mouth, eating a lemon

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Unconditional Response (UR)

response that occurs after the unconditioned stimulus, always follows after the US without need of training or learning, biologically programmed reflex

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Example of Unconditional Response (UR)

Salivating when food is placed in mouth

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Conditional Stimulus (CS)

previously neutral stimulus that is paired with the unconditioned stimulus to produce a learning contingency

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Example of Conditional Stimulus (CS)

sound of metronome paired with placing food in mouth

sight of lemon being paired with tasting a lemon

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_____ stimulus usually appears before the _____ stimulus

CONDITIONAL stimulus usually appears before the UNCONDITIONAL stimulus

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TRUE OR FALSE: it only takes one trial to pair conditional and unconditional stimuli before the CS alone can elicit a response

FALSE, it may take SEVERAL TRIALS for CS alone can elicit a response

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Conditional Response (CR)

response that occurs once the contingency between the US and the CS have been learned, after very similar to UR

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Example of Conditional Response (CR)

Salivating at the sound of metronome

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Acquisition

process by which a contingency between a CS and US is learned

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Pavlov characterized acquisition as...

a negatively accelerating curve

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Why is acquisition a negatively accelerating curve?

most of learning happens in early trials, during each consecutive trial there is learning but not as much as previous trials

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Special case where same contingencies can be acquired in single trials

Rats have learning mechanism to avoid unfamiliar foods, or when trying new foods only eat small amounts to avoid being poisoned

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Contingency will remain long as ____ stimulus continues to be a cue for the ____ stimulus

Contingency will remain long as CONDITIONAL stimulus continues to be a cue for the UNCONDITIONAL stimulus

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What happens if the conditional stimulus is no longer a reliable cue?

Conditioned response will fade

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Extinction

Loss of CR when CS no longer predicts the US

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Spontaneous Recovery

sudden recovery of the conditional response following a rest period after extinction

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Spontaneous recovery invovles...

inhibitory learned response

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What does extinction promote?

learned inhibitory response that competes with original learned contingency

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How does extinction trials differ from test trials?

test trails are presented only ONCE after acquisition to test conditioning strength

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Higher-Order Conditioning

occurs when a strong conditioned stimulus is paired with a neutral stimulus, causing the neutral stimulus to become a second conditioned stimulus

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Stimulus Generalization

process by which stimuli similar to CS will elicit a CR

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Example of Stimulus Generalization

being bit by a corgi results in the fear of all dogs

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What happens to the generalization gradient during extinction?

will be flattened

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Stimulus Discrimination

restricts range of conditioned stimuli that can elicit a response

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CS+ Stimulus

predicts presence of US

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CS- Stimulus

predicts absence of US

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When the CS- is paired with the absence of a US...

It will elicit no UR, and therefore no CR.

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If both CS+ and CS- stimuli are presented...

subject will show an immediate fear response

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Generalization provides...

efficiency and flexibility

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Discrimination provides...

refined learning process

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Phobia

exaggerated, intense, persistent fear

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2 common therapies

implosive therapy and systematic desensitization

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Implosive Therapy

individual is encouraged to confront the CS that evokes their anxiety

CS is presented without associated US

Can be tramatic

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Systematic Desensitization

more gradual exposure to fear stimulus, start extinguishing stimuli at ends of generalization curve and working towards middle

More accessible

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Compensatory Response

process which counteracts a challenge to homeostasis

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Habituation

decrease in response to stimulus or event as it is repeatedly presented without any consequence

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Sensitization

increase in response to a stimulus or event as it is repeatedly presented

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Addictions

Chemical changes associated with drug administration are also signalled by cues