Ivan Pavlov
In Pavlov's experiment, the unconditioned stimulus (US) was the food that naturally triggers the dog's salivation reflex. This means that the food automatically causes the dog to salivate without any conditioning.
1 pound of food
Dog food and any man made animal food is made for a reason. It provides animals with the nutrition they need for dogs. They have vitamins in dog food for their coat, teeth, and other important stuff so not only will they be healthy, but they'll look healthy. But the healthiest dog food recommended is Blue Buffalo.
dont give it food man its simple..
The IV in Pavlov's experiment is the bell and DV is the [amount of] salivation. The reason is that the salivation is dependent on the bell ringing. The IV in Skinner's experiment is the food reward and the DV is the amount of time it took to push the lever.
Dogs are "domestic" wolves - and like wolves they will hunt and scavenge to get their food if not fed by man.
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.
A common noun denotes a class of objects or a concept as opposed to a particular individual. examples: dog, car, person, tree, thought, word, idea... A dog ran into the street. (dog, street) The man had many thoughts about food. (man, thoughts, food) like that.
The meaning of trying it on the dog is to carry out an experiment. The experiment is usually carried on something new, something that is yet to be used.
If you want the dog to fill your house with noxious gases, give it all sorts of spicy food. Generally, I'd say stick to the program man! Give your dog ready made tinned dog food to be safe.
Pavlov's experiment was an experiment of classical conditioning. Everyone knows that when a dog sees food it salivates. In Pavlov's experiment, he rang a bell every time he gave food to his dogs. Eventually, Pavlov found that even when he rang the bell, but did not give his dogs food, they would still salivate. The dogs had become conditioned to expect food when they heard the bell. Therefore, even if there was no food given, they would still salivate at the sound of the bell. He proved that an unrelated stimulus could provoke an uncontrollable, biological response.
The term that defines the dog's salivation in response to the ringing of the bell in Pavlov's experiment is "conditioned response." In this context, salivation becomes a learned response to the previously neutral stimulus (the bell) after being paired with the unconditioned stimulus (food). Initially, the dog salivates naturally to the food, but through conditioning, the bell alone elicits the salivation.