Yahoo Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: Conditioning
  2. Dove's Range Of Hair Conditioners Help Retain Hair Moisture. Visit Our Web Site. Prevents Split Ends, And Helps Hair Breakage, Giving You Beautiful And Healthy Hair.

Search results

  1. Conditioning is a form of learning in which a response becomes more frequent or more predictable in a given environment as a result of reinforcement. Learn about the different types of conditioning, such as classical, operant, and instrumental, and how they are studied by psychologists.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Conditioning in behavioral psychology is a theory that the reaction ("response") to an object or event ("stimulus") by a person or animal can be modified by 'learning', or conditioning. The most well-known form of this is Classical Conditioning (see below), and Skinner built on it to produce Operant Conditioning.

  3. Learn how conditioning shapes our behavior, emotions, and preferences through various forms of learning and association. Explore the examples, mechanisms, and applications of classical, operant, social, and cognitive conditioning.

    • What is conditioning?
    • What is classical conditioning?
    • What is operant conditioning?
    • How do we influence behavior?
    • How effective is the conditioning?
    • What are examples of conditioning in your daily life?
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Conditioning is a type of learning that links some sort of trigger or stimulus to a human behavior or response. When psychology was first starting as a field, scientists felt they couldn’t objectively describe what was going on in people’s heads. However, they could observe behaviors so that’s what they focused on in their experiments. The major th...

    Imagine your favorite snack is peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. Whenever you get that snack, it makes you happy and you start to jump around, doing your happy PB&J dance. Your sandwich always comes on the same plate – it’s big and orange and has a picture of a tiger on it. Eventually, you might start doing your PB&J dance whenever you see your tiger plate on the table, in anticipation of the sandwich arriving.

    This type of conditioning is called classical conditioning. The presence of the plate has caused you to have the same reaction as having a PB&J sandwich. The sandwich is our stimulus (the unconditioned stimulus) and it elicits the dance which is our response (the unconditioned response). “Unconditioned” refers to the fact that no learning took place to connect the stimulus and response - you saw the the sandwich and automatically got so excited you start to dance (like a reflex!).

    The plate starts off as a neutral stimulus and elicits no reaction on its own. As it is continuously paired with the sandwich, the plate becomes a conditioned stimulus and elicits a conditioned response in the form of your happy dance. Over time, you have learned to connect the plate and the feelings of happiness that cause you to dance.

    Also interesting to think about is just why it is you dance when you see that sandwich in the first place. Earlier, we stated that it is was the unconditioned stimulus because it took no learning to cause you to dance at the sight of it. At the start of our thought experiment, that was true. However, when you were first introduced to PB&J, you would dance while eating it because it tasted so good. Eventually, an association between sight and taste formed (learned via classical conditioning) and you began to dance preemptively - just the sight was enough to trigger the feelings of joy expressed by the dance.. If we really follow this line of thought about our everyday actions, we’ll find that many, if not most, of our actions can be traced back to pretty basic needs like food, shelter, comfort, etc.

    In classical conditioning, the stimuli that precede a behavior will vary (PB&J sandwich, then tiger plate), to alter that behavior(e.g. dancing with the tiger plate!). In operant conditioning, the consequences which come after a behavior will vary, to alter that behavior. Imagine years down the road you are still enamored of delicious PB&J sandwich...

    Operant conditioning changes behaviors by using consequences, and these consequences will have two characteristics:

    1.Reinforcement or punishment

    -Reinforcement is a response or consequence that causes a behavior to occur with greater frequency.

    -Punishment is a response or consequence that causes a behavior to occur with less frequency.

    1.Positive or negative

    -Positive means adding a new stimulus.

    Imagine your tiger plate was one of a set of plates – jungle cat plates. There is a lion, a jaguar, and a leopard as well

    They’re all generally the same shape and color, so you react to these plates the same way you reacted to the tiger plate, (the original conditioned stimulus) and do your happy dance. We call this generalization – when a conditioned response (happy dance) occurs in reaction to a stimulus (jungle cat plates) other than (but often similar to) the conditioned one (tiger plate). A good way to remember is that now you do a happy dance for cat plates in general. The opposite of generalization is discrimination - the ability to tell different stimuli apart and react only to certain ones. You show discrimination whenever you don’t dance because you can tell the difference between the peanut butter and the pickle jars, for example, or by dancing only at snack time, since you know that’s the only time the PB&J happens.

    Imagine that you’ve run out of peanut butter, so you’re stuck with tuna salad for weeks (oh no!). Your parents try to make it better by serving it on your favorite tiger plate, but you soon realize the tiger plate does not mean PB&J. You lose the association between the tiger plate and PB&J, and stop doing your happy dance whenever you see that plate. We call this extinction – your conditioned response (happy dance) disappeared. However, when peanut butter in your house again and your parents serve you PB&J on your tiger plate, the previous association between the tiger plate and PB&J dance quickly will come back in full force. We call this spontaneous recovery.

    While the discussion above focused on our examples from classical conditioning, the same concepts can be applied to operant conditioning as well. Maybe your chore scheme works so well you begin to wipe down the kitchen counters whenever you make a big meal, or you refuse to allow yourself pie if you haven’t folded your laundry.

    Conditioning, both classical and operant, can be seen throughout our daily lives. Insurance companies will charge you more if you keep getting into accidents (negative punishment) or give you congratulatory certificates for safer driving (positive reinforcement). When driving, seeing flashing lights in your rearview mirror coupled with a siren will cause a gut feeling of dread even before the officer comes by with your ticket. Maybe it’s not even you they’re pulling over, but those signals (conditioned stimuli) are so associated with tickets and fines (unconditioned stimuli) that you can feel it in your stomach (conditioned response). Now that we’ve explored conditioning some, be on the lookout for examples in your day to day life, and maybe even consider using some of those techniques on yourself – for every hour and a half of studying, give yourself a ten minute break to stretch and watch funny videos or walk around!

    [References and Licensing]

    Learn how conditioning is a type of learning that links stimuli to behaviors, and how it can be influenced by reinforcement, punishment, and extinction. See examples of classical and operant conditioning in everyday situations and how they differ.

  4. May 1, 2023 · Learn how classical conditioning is a type of unconscious or automatic learning that creates a conditioned response through associations between a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus. Explore the key terms, phases, and phenomena of classical conditioning with examples and a video.

  5. Feb 1, 2024 · Learn how classical conditioning works through association of stimuli and responses, with examples from Pavlov's dogs, Watson's Little Albert, and addiction. Explore the key principles, critical evaluation, and applications of this learning theory.

  6. This book provides a concise and highly accessible summary of these new perspectives. Concepts from conditioning and learning are frequently used in the neuro-sciences, developmental psychology, psychopharmacology, and compara-tive psychology.

  1. Ad

    related to: Conditioning
  1. People also search for