enhanced response team
Habituation - Chapter 9 - development from the Robert Feldman Textbook entitled Essentials of Understanding Psychology
I think that it would be a stimulus because response is something you do because of a stimulus.
exagerrates the stimulus
stimulus: spilling water on yourself response: jumping up out or your chair in shock
complex reaction time is a stimulus response
Pavlovian response.
Nothng. No response is elicited to the conditioned stimulus because it is not associated with an unconditioned stimulus.
Habituation - Chapter 9 - development from the Robert Feldman Textbook entitled Essentials of Understanding Psychology
A stimulus is an external event that triggers a response in an organism. A response is the reaction or behavior that an organism exhibits as a result of a stimulus. In short, a stimulus is the input, while a response is the output.
An organism reacts to a stimulus with a response.
A response.
The reaction to a stimulus is called a response. An intensified stimulus usually evokes a more intense response. Of course the type of response to a stimulus depends on the nature of the stimulus. Scream at someone and they likely will feel verbally attacked. The screaming is the stimulus, feeling attacked is the response.
No, stimulus is the cause and response is the effect. In feeding an animal, giving it food is the stimulus and it eating the food is the response.
Response. The stimulus is the light.
Tropism is the response plants have towards external stimulus.
A response caused by a neutral stimulus is known as a conditioned response. This occurs when the neutral stimulus becomes associated with a unconditioned stimulus through conditioning, leading to a learned response.
Classical conditioning involves the pairing of a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus to create a conditioned response. The key elements include an unconditioned stimulus that naturally triggers a response, a neutral stimulus that initially does not elicit a response, and the pairing of the two stimuli to produce a conditioned response. Over time, the neutral stimulus alone can evoke the conditioned response.