When paired with an unconditional stimulus, a neutral stimulus can become a conditioned stimulus and produce the same response as the unconditioned stimulus.
well it depends on what kind of stimulus
The theory of stimulus generalization was demonstrated by Ivan Pavlov in his experiments with classical conditioning in dogs. He observed that dogs could generalize their learned response from one stimulus to similar stimuli.
pupies
It's a previously neutral action which comes to be associated with a real stimulus so that eventually it will cause the response. The classic example is with Pavlov's dogs. He showed them food (stimulus), causing them to salivate (response). At the same time he rang a bell. Eventually they would salivate at the sound of the bell alone. The bell was a conditioned stimulus.
its a stimulus is like an emoction!
Im guessing they had dogs! Like for hunting and guard dogs!
It is called "Conditioning" like Pavlov did with his dogs; linked a bell w/ salivation by feeding dogs when he rang a bell, so eventually the dogs salivated (response) just when they heard a bell (stimulus) without the food. Frequently used in Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) an educational therapy & approach.
Pedigree.
a husky
No kind of No kind of No kind of It depends on what kind of person you are to whether you like it or not. Some people think its cheesy. Some people like it because it has dogs.
complex reaction time is a stimulus response