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A response is an action of change in behavior that occurs as a result to a stimulus. The stimulus can be either internal or external.
Threshold stimulus
Stimulus
Yes. ....Up to a point. There is a threshold the stimulus must surpass before creating a CAP (compound action potential). Anything below this threshold is called subthreshold. Once the stimulus is strong enough cause a CAP it is a stimulus threshold. At this point the CAP will continue to increase as the intensity of the stimulus increases (now termed suprathreshold) until a maximal stimulus causes a maximum response. Any stimulus stronger than the maximal stimulus is called a supramaximal and does not result in any larger a CAP than the maximum response caused by the maximal stimulus. source: http://www.unmc.edu/physiology/Mann/mann12.html
Stimulus
A response is an action of change in behavior that occurs as a result to a stimulus. The stimulus can be either internal or external.
A Reaction
Threshold stimulus
If an organization starts to become strong, fair and competitive - as well as creating ideas for betterment - change happens. When there is a shift in ideas, tasks, activities or result, change happens.
In classical conditioning, the pairing of the conditioned stimulus (CS) with the unconditioned stimulus (US) will result in the CS becoming a conditioned stimulus that elicits a conditioned response similar to the unconditioned response that was originally triggered by the US.
Yes! Of course it can but it doesn't have to be.
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.
Stimulus
behviour refers to the response made by an individual. The response may be the result of influence of external factors. The external factor is termed as stimulus and the acton taken by the individual is known a srespose
They are directly related. Homeostasis is an environments ability to maintain stbility in a regular cycle, but when something new is introduced, the environment is able to respond to a new occurance, or stimulus, and responds in order to survive and return to maintaining a normal cycle. Without response to a new stimulus, environments would be unable to maintain homeostasis and would die out!
This is known as classical conditioning, a type of learning where a neutral stimulus becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus to elicit a response. The neutral stimulus eventually becomes a conditioned stimulus that triggers the same response.
Yes. ....Up to a point. There is a threshold the stimulus must surpass before creating a CAP (compound action potential). Anything below this threshold is called subthreshold. Once the stimulus is strong enough cause a CAP it is a stimulus threshold. At this point the CAP will continue to increase as the intensity of the stimulus increases (now termed suprathreshold) until a maximal stimulus causes a maximum response. Any stimulus stronger than the maximal stimulus is called a supramaximal and does not result in any larger a CAP than the maximum response caused by the maximal stimulus. source: http://www.unmc.edu/physiology/Mann/mann12.html