Lobes of the Brain
Classical conditioning Terms
Motivation
100

Processes all senses (touch, pressure, pain, temperature) except smell, vision, and hearing

Parietal Lobe

100

in classical conditioning, what is a neutral stimulus that comes to choose a particular conditioned response after being paired with a particular unconditioned stimulus that already elicits that response?

Conditioned Stimulus (CS)

100

Includes the various psychological and physiological factors that cause us to act a certain way.

Motivation 

200

Responsible for involuntary reflex response

Hindbrain

200

in classical conditioning, what is the learned response given to a particular conditioned stimulus?

Conditioned Response (CR)

200

Refers to engaging in activities to reduce biological needs or obtain incentives or external rewards.

Extrinsic Motivation 

300

It interprets sense of hearing and smell

Temporal Lobe

300

A form of learning in which a neutral stimulus comes to choose a response after being associated with a stimulus that already elicits that response

Classical Conditioning

300

Refers to engaging in activities that are personally rewarding or because engaging in them fulfills our beliefs or expectations.

Intrinsic Motivation 

400

The lobe of the brain that handles vision

Occipital Lobe

400

in classical conditioning, what is giving a conditioned response to stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus?

Stimulus Generalization

400

Is an internal condition that changes over time and orients an individual toward a goal.

Drive

500

It processes logic and reasoning, planning, taking responsibility

Frontal Lobe

500

In classical conditioning, what is a stimulus that automatically chooses a particular unconditoned response?

Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)

500

Natural or inherited tendencies to make a specific response to certain environmental stimuli without involving reason.

Instincts