Modules 26 & 27 Flashcards
The process of acquiring new and relatively enduring information or behaviors.
Learning
Decreasing responsiveness with repeated stimulation. As infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure to a visual stimulus, their interest wanes and they look away sooner.
Habituation
Learning that certain events occur together. The events may be two stimuli (as in classical conditioning) or a response and its consequences (as in operant conditioning).
Associative Learning
Any event or situation that evokes a response.
Stimulus
The acquisition of mental information, whether by observing events, by watching others, or through language.
Cognitive learning
A type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events.
Classical Conditioning
The view that psychology (1) should be an objective science that (2) studies behavior without reference to mental processes. Most research psychologists today agree with (1) but not with (2).
Behaviorism
In classical conditioning, a stimulus that elicits no response before conditioning.
Neutral Stimulus
In classical conditioning, an unlearned, naturally occurring response (such as salivation) to an unconditioned stimulus (US) (such as food in the mouth).
Unconditioned Response (UR)
In classical conditioning, a stimulus that unconditionally–naturally and automatically–triggers a response.
Uncondtioned Stimulus (US)
In classical conditioning, a learned response to a previously neutral (but now conditioned) stimulus (CS).
Condtioned Response (CR)
In classical conditioning, an originally irrelevant stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus (US), comes to trigger a conditioned response (CR).
Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
In classical conditioning, the initial stage, when one links a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus so that the neutral stimulus begins triggering the conditioned response. In operant conditioning, the strengthening of a reinforced response.
Acquisition
A procedure in which the conditioned stimulus in one conditioning experience is paired with a new neutral stimulus, creating a second (often weaker) conditioned stimulus. For example, an animal that has learned that a tone predicts food might then learn that a light predicts the tone and begin responding to the light alone. (Also called second-order conditioning.)
Higher-Order Conditioning
The diminishing of a conditioned response; occurs in classical conditioning when an unconditioned stimulus (US) does not follow a conditioned stimulus (CS); occurs in operant conditioning when a response is no longer reinforced.
Extinction