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느루독서심리연구센터(010-2788-3025)
[PSYCH 101] Classical conditioning - Learning by association 본문
[PSYCH 101] Classical conditioning - Learning by association
느루독서심리연구센터(010-2788-3025) 2019. 8. 28. 16:08Classical conditioning - Learning by association
Classical conditioning was Ivan Pavlov's most famous and influential work, and it laid much of the groundwork of behavioral psychology. In essence, the idea of classical conditioning is simply learning something by association. Pavlov identified four basic principles:
1. The Unconditioned Stimulus: A stimuls is any act, influence, or agent that creates a response. An unconditioned stimulus is when the stimulus automatically triggers some type of response. For example, if pollen makes a person sneeze, the pollen is an unconditioned stimulus.
2. The Unconditioned Response: This is a response that is automatically triggered as a result of the unconditioned stimulus. In essence, this is a natural, unconscious reaction to whatever the stimulus might be. For example, if pollen makes a person sneeze, the sneeze is the unconditoined response.
3. The Conditioned Stimulus: When a neutral stimuls (a stimulus that is not related to the response) becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus, thus triggering conditioned response.
4. The Conditioned Response: This is a response that was learned from the once-neutral stimulus.
Confused? Don't be. It's actually very simple! Imagine if you flinched after hearing a loud sound. The sound triggered a natural response, making it an unconditioned stimulus, and the flinching was the unconditioned response because it was something that you did unconsciously as a result of the unconditioned stimulus.
Now, if you repeatedly witnessed a certain movement happen at the same time as, or a little bit before, the loud noise occurred - for example, a person swinging their first to slam it on a table - you might them begin to associate that movement with the loud sound, flinching whenever you see a fist move in a similar manner, even if there is no sound. The movement of the fist (the conditioned stimulus) became associated with the unconditioned stimulus (the sound), and made you flinch (the conditioned response).
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