There is no tone that causes a dog to salivate; you need to train a particular dog to do that as it is a learned behavior. You might want to read about the apparently not-so-famous experiment by Ivan Pavlov.
Dogs have voluntary and involuntary actions. For example, toys flow when they see food. He can be trained to reach a higher level of calm, positive behavior and more obedience because he is a friend and loyal to us. Dogs are the most intelligent animal.
Yes, in some cases Blue Buffalo Cat Food does cause crystals in Cat urine.
Pavlov would ring a bell then feed his dogs. He did this for a long time. Then whenever he would ring the bell his dogs would begin to salivate (drool) in anticipation of their food. Basically, he trained his dogs so that they associated the sound of the bell with receiving their food, and therefore whenever they heard a bell they anticipated food and began to drool. It's "conditioned" response, not "unconditional." Conditioned means that they would just give that response naturally, not like "trained" behavior in which the dog would know that "sit" meant he should sit down, and then do it voluntarily. The dog was not thinking, "OK, there's a bell, so that means I should drool now." The drooling (salivating) would happen all by itself. I mean, a human can sit on purpose, right? but you can't drool on purpose, except by thinking about food.
yes
food
Presentation means how something is displayed.Her food presentation made the meal into artwork.I was impressed at the food presentation at that restaurant.
A conditioned stimulus is a previously neutral stimulus that, after being paired with an unconditioned stimulus, triggers a conditioned response. An unconditioned stimulus is one that naturally triggers a response without prior learning, such as food causing salivation.
Pavlov's dog salivated to a tone because the tone had been repeatedly paired with the presentation of food. This led to the dog associating the tone with food, triggering a conditioned response of salivation even when food was not present.
Service Style in Food presentation plays a role such that when the service style of the crew that does the food presentation is not good, the presentation intself will be affected.
no worries, it probably is just because the dog sees food that he or she really wants.
A classic example of social conditioning would probably be Pavlov's dogs.Everytime Pavlov (a scientist) fed his dogs, he would ring a bell. The dogs would salivate at the food. Eventually, the dogs began to associate the sound of the bell with food and Pavlov would be able to ring the bell and the dogs would come to him without him having to put food down for them. Just the sound of the bell would cause the dogs to salivate because they assumed it meant food.
The first cause of food intolerance associated with the what you eat or the way you eat is eating too much of the same food too often. The next cause of food intolerance associated with what you eat or the way you eat is eating too many foods that contain additives, preservatives colouring agents and flavour enhancers.
The proper presentation of food is important because food is first tasted with your eyes. It is important to present food professionally so the whole dining experience is enhanced. A sloppy presentation can ruin a dish.
No, actually thinking about the food is the first step because you start to salivate when you see or think about food.
The way food is arranged on a dish.
you begin to salivate first, this gets your taste buds ready for the grub.
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.