Classical Conditioning

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Transcript Classical Conditioning

Classical Conditioning
Ivan Pavlov
Ivan Pavlov’s Failure
 Early 19 hundreds
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No restrictions on the type of research you
could do. (PETA, IRB,…)
 Dog’s digestive track.
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Tube inserted into the dog’s stomach
Given food, then saliva collected in a jar
Timed the processing from start to finish.
 Complete Failure
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Dog’s would salivate all the time.
Ivan Pavlov’s Background
Classically Educated Scientist
 Philosophy of Aristotle
Learn through similarities
 Learn through differentiation
 Learn through contiguity
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 One object is associated with another
 No logical relationship
 Objects are just PAIRED together.
Classical Conditioning
 Theoretical Model (Static)
 Stimulus Response
 Causal relationship between events
 Cookies baking smell
hunger pangs
 Stimuli
 Cause of the response
 Types of Stimulus
 Unconditioned Stimulus (US)
 Natural cause of the response
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Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
 Unnatural cause of the response
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Neutral Stimulus (NS)
 Causes nothing
Classical Conditioning
 Responses
 Natural reaction to stimulus
 Characteristics of C.C. responses
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Involuntary
Physiological
Reflex
Types of Responses
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Unconditioned Response (UR)
 Natural reaction to a stimulus
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Conditioned Response (CR)
 Unnatural reaction to a stimulus
Classical Conditioning
 Theoretical Model (Dynamic)
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Stage 1:
US
Meat
UR
Saliva
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Stage 2:
US NS
Meat Bell
UR
Saliva
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Stage 3:
CS
Bell
CR
Saliva
Classical Conditioning
 Methods for Associating
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Repetition
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Meat & Bell, over and over again
Profound Experience
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Usually a trauma
 Near death experience
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“Our Song”
Classical Conditioning
 Features of Classical Conditioning
 Generalization
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Stimulus is close enough to CS that it causes a
CR.
 Glass clinking causes dogs to salivate
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Discrimination
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Stimulus is different enough from CS that it
doesn’t cause a CR.
 Key chain does not cause dogs to salivate
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Extinction
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Continued presentation of the CS without the US