conditioned stimulus
In classical conditioning, the conditioned stimulus will trigger the conditioned response. It is also referred to as respondent conditioning.
A conditioned response can be extinguished through repeated presentation of the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus. Over time, the association between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus weakens, leading to a decrease or disappearance of the conditioned response.
A learned response elicited by a conditioned stimulus is known as a conditioned response. It is acquired through classical conditioning, where an initially neutral stimulus (conditioned stimulus) becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus to elicit a specific response. Over time, the conditioned stimulus alone can trigger the conditioned response.
The conditioned response is the learned response that is triggered by the conditioned stimulus. It is typically similar to the unconditioned response that is naturally elicited by the unconditioned stimulus.
A conditioned stimulus is an initially neutral stimulus that becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus to elicit a conditioned response.
The process that allows a second stimulus to cause the same response as the originally conditioned stimulus is called stimulus generalization. This occurs when similar stimuli to the conditioned stimulus also trigger the conditioned response.
Generalization is the tendency to respond to a stimulus that is similar but not identical to a conditioned stimulus.
You can extinguish classically conditioned behavior by repeatedly presenting the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus until the conditioned response weakens and eventually disappears. This process is known as extinction. It is important to consistently withhold the unconditioned stimulus so that the association between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus is broken.
The term that describes the loss of a conditioned response if the natural stimulus is removed is extinction. Extinction occurs when the conditioned response diminishes or disappears because the conditioned stimulus is no longer paired with the unconditioned stimulus.
If a conditioned stimulus is repeated without being paired with an unconditioned stimulus, the association between the two stimuli can weaken or disappear, a process called extinction. This can lead to the conditioned response fading away, as the conditioned stimulus is no longer seen as predictive of the unconditioned stimulus.
Through repeated pairing, the conditioned stimulus becomes associated with the unconditioned stimulus, resulting in the conditioned stimulus elicing the conditioned response on its own. This process is known as classical conditioning and involves the formation of a learned association between the two stimuli.