Classical conditioning. If you run a search for Pavlov, you can find loads of information about classical conditioning
Classical conditioning - where a neutral stimulus (bell) becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus (food) through repeated pairings, leading to a learned response. In this case, the dog's salivating to the bell is a conditioned response.
The term that defines the dogs' salivation in response to only the ringing of the bell is "conditioned response." This means that the dogs have learned to associate the bell with food, leading to salivation even when food is not present.
This is known as classical conditioning, a learning process where an organism comes to associate two different stimuli. An example would be Pavlov's experiment where dogs learned to associate the sound of a bell with the presentation of food, causing them to salivate at the sound of the bell alone.
Pavlovian behavior, also known as classical conditioning, is a type of learning in which an organism learns to associate a neutral stimulus with a significant event or stimulus. This leads to a response being triggered by the neutral stimulus alone. The classic example is Pavlov's experiment with dogs, in which they learned to associate the sound of a bell with the arrival of food, leading them to salivate at the sound of the bell alone.
You will get a conditioned response. Since i know that this topic can be complicated i'll try and make it a little easier to understand. An unconditioned stimulus is one that occurs naturally without any kind of training. As an example, look at the innate fears that we have due to evolution. Certain animals, bitter tastes elicit a response (such as running away or spitting out the bitter food). This is the unconditioned response. Another example is the eye blink response. When a puff of air hits your eye, you automatically blink. Now say for example when the puff of air hits your eye, a bell rings (a conditioned stimulus) and you blink. After this connection between the puff of air, the bell and eye blink has been learned, the bell ringing itself will cause you to blink in absence of the air puff. This is the conditioned response as naturally, hearing a bell ring, does not make you blink.
Pavlov paired the ringing of a bell with the presentation of food to the dogs, causing them to associate the bell with the imminent arrival of food. Through repeated pairings, the dogs learned to salivate at the sound of the bell alone, even in the absence of food. This process is known as classical conditioning.
conditioned stimulus
its not exactly an example of anything he was just testing to see if tha dog salivated. -ya but is it reasoning, instinct, conditioning, trial an error or just a habit?
The term that defines the dogs' salivation in response to only the ringing of the bell is "conditioned response." This means that the dogs have learned to associate the bell with food, leading to salivation even when food is not present.
the correct term is learned behaviour, such as in pavlovian theory.inate behaviour is one that the species already does naturally, such as blinking,a learned behaviour is something done as a result of a previous, or multiple previous occourances and learning from these, such as the example of the learned behaviour study used initially in pavlovian therom..that of a dog learning to salivate upon the ring of a bell after the bell previously being rung in the same time period of the persentation of food.the salivating with food is an inate behaviour,the salivation upon the bell being rung was a learned behaviour.
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An example of associative learning in biology is classical conditioning, where an organism learns to associate a neutral stimulus with a meaningful stimulus. One classic example is Pavlov's experiment with dogs, where the dogs learned to associate the ringing of a bell with the presentation of food and began salivating in response to the bell alone.
His mother was deaf. That's why he learned a sign language.
yes taco bell is a example of erosion
learned behavior Pavlovian response
No.
For example "rebellion."
Automatic responses to certain stimuli also known as conditioned responses occur when a certain stimulus is paired with an involuntary response. An example of this is Pavlovs famous experiment with dogs where he paired the ringing of a bell with the presentation of food. Over time the dogs learned to salivate at the sound of the bell even without the food being presented. This is an example of a conditioned response.Other examples of automatic responses to certain stimuli include: Fear response a person may freeze or become panicked when they hear a loud noise Gag reflex a person may reflexively gag when presented with certain tastes or smells Startle response a person may jump when a sudden loud noise is heardAutomatic responses to certain stimuli are a form of learning and can be beneficial in certain situations such as when a person has a fear of loud noises. By pairing the loud noise with a calm response the person can learn to become desensitized to the noise and no longer experience fear.