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.
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.
You can extinguish classically conditioned behavior by repeatedly presenting the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus until the conditioned response weakens and eventually disappears. This process is known as extinction. It is important to consistently withhold the unconditioned stimulus so that the association between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus is broken.
Extinction of the conditioned response.
An unconditioned stimulus UCS is stimuli or anything that brings out a reaction that is innate, not learned, automatic, etc.A conditioned stimulus CS is a once neutral or unrelated stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus, which after training and learning signals the conditioned response.Take a dog for example. A dog will salivate at the sight of food, salivation is the unconditioned stimulus, dogs don't learn how to drool they just do. Then pair the sight of food with the ringing of a bell, once unrelated, and the dog will learn to associate the bell with food and will therefore salivate. And the bell becomes the conditioned stimulus.For more information/source go to Exploring Psychology by David Myers
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.
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.
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.
You can extinguish classically conditioned behavior by repeatedly presenting the conditioned stimulus without the unconditioned stimulus until the conditioned response weakens and eventually disappears. This process is known as extinction. It is important to consistently withhold the unconditioned stimulus so that the association between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus is broken.
Extinction of the conditioned response.
An unconditioned stimulus UCS is stimuli or anything that brings out a reaction that is innate, not learned, automatic, etc.A conditioned stimulus CS is a once neutral or unrelated stimulus that has been paired with an unconditioned stimulus, which after training and learning signals the conditioned response.Take a dog for example. A dog will salivate at the sight of food, salivation is the unconditioned stimulus, dogs don't learn how to drool they just do. Then pair the sight of food with the ringing of a bell, once unrelated, and the dog will learn to associate the bell with food and will therefore salivate. And the bell becomes the conditioned stimulus.For more information/source go to Exploring Psychology by David Myers
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.
You will get a conditioned response. Since i know that this topic can be complicated i'll try and make it a little easier to understand. An unconditioned stimulus is one that occurs naturally without any kind of training. As an example, look at the innate fears that we have due to evolution. Certain animals, bitter tastes elicit a response (such as running away or spitting out the bitter food). This is the unconditioned response. Another example is the eye blink response. When a puff of air hits your eye, you automatically blink. Now say for example when the puff of air hits your eye, a bell rings (a conditioned stimulus) and you blink. After this connection between the puff of air, the bell and eye blink has been learned, the bell ringing itself will cause you to blink in absence of the air puff. This is the conditioned response as naturally, hearing a bell ring, does not make you blink.
A conditioned response can become extinct by reverse conditioning. That is, if a dog has been conditioned to drool when he hears a bell, he can be conditioned not to drool when he hears the bell.The conditioned response in psychology may become extinct when the withdrawl of reinforcement happens.
Repeatedly presenting a conditioned stimulus (CS) by itself without the unconditioned stimulus (US) will eventually lead to the extinction of the conditioned response. This means that the association between the CS and the US weakens, and the conditioned response diminishes over time.
A conditioned reflex is learned through association, such as Pavlov's dogs salivating at the sound of a bell paired with food. In contrast, an unconditioned reflex is an innate, automatic response to a stimulus without prior learning, like blinking when something comes close to your eye.
If I'm not mistaken, Unconditioned stimulus(UCS) is a term used in classical conditioning, to explain a stimulus that elicits a reflexive response, also termed the Unconditioned response(UCR) without/before any learning or conditioning.
An unconditioned stimulus is a stimulus that naturally triggers a response without any prior learning. It's something that prompts an automatic, innate reaction. For example, the smell of food causing salivation.