CLASSICAL CONDITIONING OPERANT CONDITIONING Acquisition The acquisition phase is the initial learning of the conditioned responsefor example‚ the dog learning to salivate at the sound of the bell. Several factors can affect the speed of conditioning during the acquisition phase. The most important factors are the order and timing of the stimuli. Conditioning occurs most quickly when the conditioned stimulus (the bell) precedes the unconditioned stimulus (the food) by about half a second. Conditioning
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Classical conditioning is a method used in behavioral studies. It is known as classical because it is the first study of laws of learning/conditioning‚ It is a learned reaction that you do when evoked by a stimulus. Ivan Pavlov was the scientist who discovered classical conditioning. Ivan Pavlov was born in Russia. He lived from 1849 - 1936 . Pavlov’s field of study was physiology and natural science. One of Pavlov’s discoveries was the conditioning of dogs. While working with
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Operant Conditioning Skinner showed how positive reinforcement worked by placing a hungry rat in his Skinner box. The box contained a lever in the side and as the rat moved about the box it would accidentally knock the lever. Immediately it did so a food pellet would drop into a container next to the lever. The rats quickly learned to go straight to the lever after a few times of being put in the box. The consequence of receiving food if they pressed the lever ensured that they would repeat
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Operant conditioning‚ also known as instrumental conditioning‚ is a form of learning that utilizes a specific stimulus to result a voluntary response from the subject. 278 The only difference between classical conditioning and operant conditioning is the type of response. Both forms of conditioning has a stimulus that produces a response‚ however‚ unlike operant conditioning‚ classical conditioning produces an involuntary response to an unconditioned stimulus 281.Within operant conditioning‚ there
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The behavior I have is a fear of flying. This behavior developed when I was younger on an international flight back to the U.S.‚ there was a bad storm and the turbulence was really bad and the plane felt like it was dropping out of the sky. Also there was another instance where I was flying through the mountains in a propeller plane. These particular planes do not fly as high as say a Boeing 757 or a jet‚ therefore you feel every single wind gust and bump. As the plane was descending into our destination
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every single day. This ability is of great importance in our everyday lives. Martin‚ Carlson and Buskist (2010) deal with three different ways in which humans learn: habituation‚ classical conditioning and operant conditioning. Although all three of these can be associated with phobias‚ classical conditioning can be perhaps the strongest in terms of developing ‘‘unreasonable fears of specific objects or situations’’ (Martin et al.‚ 2010‚ p. 262) or in other words‚ phobias. Phobias can also be treated
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Classical Conditioning Over the last 100 years classical conditioning evolved from a simple transfer of one stimuli to another to more complex studies of conditioning. Researchers still use classical conditioning today as a method used to study associative learning (Terry‚ 2009). Classical conditioning has several levels: Behaviorally - is learning of a new response‚ cognitively - is to gain knowledge between the stimuli’s relationships‚ and neutrally - is the synaptic changes that motivate
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Based of the course syllabus‚ there are three main concepts and perspectives that this instrumental course was built upon (California Baptist University’s Core Four‚ ECS-SLOs‚ and the preferred outcomes for this course). As I reflect upon all the concepts and theories that were presented‚ I would argue that all three perspectives were sufficiently meet in order to provide the best educational possible for those who are perspective educators. The first concept that I believe is an obvious connection
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[Q1] Multiple Choice - 1 point 1) A group of ideas‚ assumptions‚ and generalizations that interpret and illuminate observations that have been made about human growth is referred to as a ____________ theory. A. behavioral B. psychoanalytical C. humanistic D. developmental Answer: D [Q2] Multiple Choice - 1 point 2) _________theorists try to make sense out of observations and construct a story of the human journey from infancy to adulthood. A. Developmental B. Psychoanalytical C. Behavioral D.
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PoC Needs and Drives Needs and drives‚ what exactly are they and what do they have to do with dogs/dog training? A need or drive is a type of motivation that describes the behaviors dogs show during training. Needs can be something as obvious as water or food‚ all the way to behaviors that serve no clear physical need at all (ex play behavior). Dog training is all about arranging matters so the dog’s yearnings are met when they perform the desired action. Before any of this can take place you
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