Chapter 5 Assignment 1
Chapter 5 Assignment 1
This theory explains how organisms learn through association and how behaviors
can be modified or influenced by external factors.
1. Unconditioned Stimulus:
2. Unconditioned Response:
The automatic, innate response to the UCS. In the case of food, salivation is the
unconditioned response.
3. Neutral Stimulus :
A stimulus that initially does not elicit any specific response or reaction. For
instance, the sound of a bell has no significant meaning to a dog in Pavlov's
experiments.
4. Conditioned Stimulus :
A previously neutral stimulus that, after repeated pairing with the UCS, acquires
the ability to evoke a response. In Pavlov’s work, the sound of the bell became the
conditioned stimulus.
5. Conditioned Response :
The learned response to the conditioned stimulus, which is similar to the UCR. For
example, salivating at the sound of the bell after conditioning.
Pavlov’s most famous research involved dogs and their salivary responses. He
observed that dogs would salivate not only when they saw or smelled food but also
when they heard footsteps of the person bringing the food. This observation led him
to conduct a series of experiments to understand the mechanism of such learning.
1. Before Conditioning:
2. During Conditioning:
- Pavlov rang a bell (NS) immediately before presenting food (UCS) to the dogs.
This process was repeated several times, allowing the dogs to associate the two
stimuli.
3. After Conditioning:
-The bell (now a CS) alone triggered the CR (salivation), even in the absence of
food.
Pavlov concluded that the dogs had learned to associate the sound of the bell with
the arrival of food, demonstrating the principles of classical conditioning.
- Behavioral psychology
- Therapy for phobias
- Marketing and advertising
- Educational techniques
- Examples of Classical Conditioning
1) McDonald's
Conclusion