Unit 2 - Ch 3&4 Flashcards
Aversion Therapy
Aversion therapy is the pairing of an unpleasant response (CR), often nausea, with a US that usually causes pleasure.
In aversion therapy, a stimulus that elicits an inappropriate response is paired with an aversive stimulus such as shock or an emetic drug.
Backward Conditioning
Backward conditioning is a Pavlovian conditioning procedure in which the unconditional stimulus is presented before the conditional stimulus
Blocking
• failure of a stimulus to become a conditional stimulus when it is part of a compound stimulus that includes an effective conditional stimulus.
The effective conditional stimulus is said to block the formation of a new conditional stimulus.
Blocking occurs when a stimulus fails to become a CS due to its previous pairing within a compound stimulus with an effective CS. This is similar to overshadowing in that one stimulus prevents another from becoming a CS. The distinction between the two is that in overshadowing the effect is from differences in characteristics between the stimuli, whereas in blocking the effect is from prior experience with a specific part of a compound stimulus.
Classical Conditioning
A type of learning where a stimulus acquires the ability to evoke a response that was originally evoked by another stimulus. Explains reflexive responding that is largely controlled by stimuli that precede the response. Call and response. (Pavlovian Conditioning).
Compound Stimulus
two or more stimuli presented simultaneously, often as a conditioned stimulus
Conditional Reflex
a reflex acquired through Pavlovian conditioning consisting of a conditional stimulus and a conditional response
Conditional Response
A learned reaction to a conditioned stimulus that occurs because of previous conditioning.
Conditional Stimulus
A previously neutral stimulus that has, through conditioning, acquired the capacity to evoke a conditioned response (CS).
Conditioned Taste Aversion
• Result from the pairing of distinctive flavors and aversive (especially nausea-inducing) stimuli
Differs from normal pavlovian conditioning procedures in two important ways.
First, the CS and US only need to be paired once, whereas other pavlovian conditioning requires multiple pairings of the CS and the US.
Second, in taste aversion conditioning the interval between the presentation of the CS and the US is pretty long, several minutes or even hours. In typical conditioning the interval is usually a couple of seconds.
Blue jays acquire a taste aversion for monarch butterflies after eating ones that are poisonous through having eaten certain milkweed. This is a conditioned taste aversion.
Contiguity
nearness of events in time (temporal contiguity) or space (spatial contiguity)
Contingency
- a dependency between events
- an event may be stimulus-contingent (dependent on the appearance of the stimulus) or response-contingent (dependent on the appearance of a behavior)
Counter Conditioning
• Exposure Therapy
• Mary Cover Jones
Peter had a fear of rabbits, but loved milk and crackers. She would slowly pair the rabbit with food that made him happy in order for him to feel safe around the rabbit.
Delayed Conditioning
• a Pavlovian conditioning procedure in which the conditional stimulus and unconditional stimulus overlap
• the conditional stimulus is presented before the unconditional stimulus, but continues after the unconditional stimulus appears
In delayed conditioning, the CS and US overlap.
Extinction
• The gradual weakening and disappearance of a conditioned response tendency.
In Pavlovian conditioning, the regular appearance of the CS alone–i.e., without the unconditional stimulus
this will lead to a loss of the conditional response
If, following conditioning, a CS is repeatedly presented without the US, the procedure is called extinction
Higher Order Conditioning
A conditioned stimulus functions as if it were an unconditioned stimulus. For example, pairing US meat with CS tone, then CS tone with another CS, a red light. The dog will salivate with the red light.
Frolov’s experiment in which a dog learned to salivate at the sight of a black square after it had been paired with a CS for salivating is an example of higher-order conditioning