Habituation - Chapter 9 - development from the Robert Feldman Textbook entitled Essentials of Understanding Psychology
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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
The term for a person's tendency to become familiar with a stimulus due to repeated experiences is "habituation." It is a decrease in response to a stimulus after repeated exposure to it.
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The term for a person's tendency to become familiar with a stimulus due to repeated experiences is "habituation." This process involves a decrease in response to a stimulus after repeated exposure, as the individual becomes accustomed to it.
The process in which an animal stops responding to a repeated stimulus is called habituation. Broadly defined, stimulus results in a reaction.
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.
The timing of stimulus presentations can affect the strength of the conditioned response through processes like temporal contiguity and temporal specificity. Pairing the conditioned stimulus and unconditioned stimulus close together in time (temporal contiguity) tends to result in stronger conditioning. Additionally, presenting the conditioned stimulus just before the unconditioned stimulus (temporal specificity) can enhance the strength of the conditioned response.
A neutral stimulus is a stimulus that initially does not elicit a specific response. In classical conditioning, the neutral stimulus becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus through repeated pairing, eventually causing the neutral stimulus to elicit the same response as the meaningful stimulus.
If a conditioned stimulus is repeated over and over without being paired with an unconditioned stimulus, the conditioned response will weaken and eventually extinguish through a process called extinction. The association between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus will weaken, leading to a loss of the learned response.
Pavlovian response.
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.
This process is known as classical conditioning, where a neutral stimulus becomes associated with a response due to repeated pairing with another stimulus that naturally elicits that response. Over time, the neutral stimulus alone can trigger the response.
Conditioned response is acquired through classical conditioning, which involves pairing a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus to eventually elicit a response to the neutral stimulus alone. Over time, the neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus that triggers the conditioned response. This process is based on the principles of association and learning through repeated pairings of stimuli.