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Related Concept Videos

Principles of Classical Conditioning01:23

Principles of Classical Conditioning

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Classical conditioning, as described by Ivan Pavlov, is a foundational concept in associative learning, where a neutral stimulus becomes capable of eliciting a conditioned response through association with an unconditioned stimulus. The process of acquisition, where this learning occurs, and the subsequent phenomena of contiguity, contingency, generalization, discrimination, extinction, and spontaneous recovery are crucial for a comprehensive understanding of classical conditioning.
During the...
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Classical Conditioning01:18

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Associative learning, a core principle in behavioral psychology, involves forming connections between events and facilitating learned responses. This concept is vividly illustrated by classical conditioning, a process extensively studied by the Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov. Pavlov's pioneering research on dogs' digestive systems led to the discovery that behaviors can be learned through association, laying the groundwork for classical conditioning.
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Real-World Application of Classical Conditioning01:15

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Classical conditioning not only includes the initial pairing of stimuli but also extends to more complex forms, such as higher-order conditioning. Higher-order conditioning involves creating associations beyond the primary conditioned stimulus, resulting in a chain of conditioned responses.
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In signal processing, signals are classified based on various characteristics: continuous-time versus discrete-time, periodic versus aperiodic, analog versus digital, and causal versus noncausal. Each category highlights distinct properties crucial for understanding and manipulating signals.
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Classical Conditioning in Daily Life01:17

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Classical conditioning, a fundamental principle of associative learning, explains various phenomena observed in daily life, such as fear development, the placebo effect, taste aversion, and drug habituation. These applications demonstrate the profound impact of associative learning on human behavior and physiological responses.
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Signal sequences are short amino acid sequences that guide newly synthesized proteins to their proper location within the cell. Classical signal sequences are fifteen to sixty amino acids long and present at the N-terminus of a polypeptide chain. Each signal sequence has a conserved segment of basic residues towards their N terminus, a hydrophobic core, and a C-terminus rich in polar residues. The C-terminus also contains a signal cleavage site and features a -3 -1 sequence motif. The -3-1...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Apr 28, 2026

Behavioral Determination of Stimulus Pair Discrimination of Auditory Acoustic and Electrical Stimuli Using a Classical Conditioning and Heart-rate Approach
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Behavioral Determination of Stimulus Pair Discrimination of Auditory Acoustic and Electrical Stimuli Using a Classical Conditioning and Heart-rate Approach

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Classical conditioning, signal detection, and evolution.

N A Schmajuk1

  • 1Center for Adaptive Systems, Boston University, Department of Mathematics, 111 Cummington Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02215 USA.

Behavioural Processes
|June 14, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Classical conditioning strength increases with better conditioned stimulus (CS) and unconditioned stimulus (US) association. This study models conditioning as a decision process maximizing benefits, aligning theory with experimental data.

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Area of Science:

  • Behavioral psychology
  • Cognitive science
  • Evolutionary theory

Background:

  • Classical conditioning strength depends on stimulus discriminability and contingency.
  • Conditioning can be viewed as a decision process balancing costs and benefits.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To theoretically derive the relationship between contingency and classical conditioning strength.
  • To integrate a decision rule into a signal detection paradigm to explain conditioning dynamics.

Main Methods:

  • Theoretical derivation based on maximizing expected benefit in a decision process.
  • Incorporation of the decision rule into a signal detection paradigm.

Main Results:

  • Empirical relationship between contingency and conditioning strength is theoretically derived.
  • Theoretical results align with experimental data regarding CS discriminability and CS-US contingency.

Conclusions:

  • The decision-making model successfully explains the strength of classical conditioning.
  • Evolutionary principles of cost-benefit trade-offs can inform understanding of learning processes.