CC Procedure
OTHER CC Terms
Other CC Procedures
Interventions that use extinction
Interventions that use counterconditioning
100

The scientist most closely associated with classical conditioning.

Who is Pavlov?

100

Occurs when, after the CS is repeatedly presented without the US, the CS no longer produces a CR. 

What is classical extinction?

100

Occurs when pre-exposure to a neutral stimulus alone on multiple occasions prior to conditioning trials reduces the likelihood that the stimulus will become a CS and elicit a CR when it’s subsequently paired with a US.

What is Latent Inhibition?

100

The client is exposed to the feared (conditioned) stimulus while preventing the client from making his/her usual avoidance response

What is exposure with response prevention?

100

Developed by Joseph Wolpe as a treatment for phobic anxiety

What is systematic desensitization? 

200

Meat powder

What is an unconditioned stimulus?

200

Occurs when a CR returns after it was apparently extinguished

What is spontaneous recovery?

200

Involves treating a CS (e.g., a ringing bell) as an unconditioned stimulus and pairing it with a neutral stimulus. 

What is higher-order conditioning?

200

Involves sustained exposure to stimuli that elicit the most intense levels of anxiety during all exposure sessions. 

What is flooding?

200

Used to treat addictions and other self-reinforcing behaviors

What is aversion therapy?

300

Presentation of the CS precedes and overlaps presentation of the US. 

What is delay conditioning?

300

This was best described by John Watson, a small child, and a rodent.

What is Stimulus Generalization? 

300

Occurs apparently because the second neutral stimulus does not provide any new information about the occurrence of the US

What is blocking?

300

Often used to treatment substance use disorders

What is cue exposure therapy?

300

The client learns relaxation. The client and therapist develop a hierarchy of events. The client imagines steps in the hierarchy and uses relaxation strategies while doing so.

What are the steps to systematic desensitization?

400

The CS is presented and terminated just before the US is presented.

What is trace conditioning?

400

Caused by a conflict between excitatory and inhibitory processes in the central nervous system

What is experimental neurosis?

400

Occurs when two neutral stimuli are, from the start, repeatedly presented together before the US. 

What is overshadowing?

400

The therapist encourages the client to exaggerate his/her image of the feared object or event in order to elicit a high level of anxiety and embellishes the scene being imagined by the client with psychodynamic conflicts that are believed to underlie the client’s anxiety

What is implosive therapy?

400

When aversion therapy is conducted in imagination rather than in vivo

What is covert sensitization?

500

The CS and US are presented and terminated at about the same time.  

What is simultaneous conditioning? 

500

The opposite of stimulus generalization and is the ability to discriminate between the CS and similar stimuli.

What is stimulus discrimination?

500

Blocking and Overshadowing

What is compound conditioning?

500

Involves progressive exposure to anxiety-arousing stimuli, beginning with the least anxiety-arousing stimulus and gradually progressing to stimuli that produce increasingly greater levels of anxiety.

What is graded exposure?

500

Extinguishes the anxiety response to these stimuli by repeatedly presenting them without that unconditioned stimulus.

What is systematic desensitization?

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