General Principles
Key Terms
The process
Timing
Beyond the Basics
100

A relatively permanent change in behavior due to experience.

Learning

100

This stimulus naturally causes a response without any prior training.

UCS

100

The specific process of repeated pairings of the CS and UCS.

Aquisition

100

Timing where the CS comes just before, and sometimes overlaps with, the UCS.

Forward conditioning

100

This type of learning occurs based purely on the passage of time.

Temporal Conditioning

200

Any act that is observable.

Behavior

200

The natural, automatic response that occurs due to the unconditioned stimulus.

UCR

200

This general aspect of conditioning works best when the CS comes just before the UCS.

Timing of Conditioning

200

The CS ends completely before the UCS begins.

Trace Conditioning

200

In Pavlov's classic experiment, the food served this role in the conditioning process.

UCS

300

 This comes from our interaction with the environment.

Experience

300

This begins as a neutral stimulus and produces a response only after repeated pairings.

CS

300

This specific timing method is generally considered the most effective for classical conditioning.

Forward Conditioning

300

 The CS continues until the UCS begins.

Delayed Conditioning

300

When the dogs in Pavlov's experiment salivated at the sound of the bell alone, this was the response.

CR

400

This type of learning happens when two things are paired together.

Associative Learning

400

The learned response that occurs due to the conditioned stimulus after conditioning has taken place.

CR

400

This occurs when the CS is repeatedly presented without the UCS, eventually weakening the CR.

Extinction

400

The CS and UCS happen at the exact same time.

Simultaneous Conditioning

400

The goal of the acquisition phase is for the neutral stimulus to become this type of stimulus.

CS

500

This specific type of learning occurs when a neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus through pairing.

Classical Conditioning

500

The Russian physiologist famous for his experiments with dogs.

Pavlov

500

When a previously extinguished conditioned response suddenly reappears after a rest period.

Spontaneous Recovery

500

This is generally ineffective as the UCS comes before the CS.

Backward Conditioning