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Unit 4: Learning
Unit 4: Learning

... imitation of aggressive models. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 63, 575582. This paper is available online through the Classics in the History of Psychology ...
Chapter 8 Vocabulary
Chapter 8 Vocabulary

... experience. (p.287) In ____________________ ____________________, organisms learn that certain events occur together. Two variations of associative learning are classical conditioning and operant conditioning. (p. 288) ______________________ is the school of thought maintaining that psychology shoul ...
Operant Conditioning, 1
Operant Conditioning, 1

... leads to satisfying effects, the association between the stimulus and the response is strengthened ...
Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the
Neural Integration I: Sensory Pathways and the

... • i.e.: rub eyes = mechanical stimulus causes visual of flashes of lights; any activity along optic nerve travels to visual cortex = visual ...
Habituation - Jamie Dyce
Habituation - Jamie Dyce

...  getting used to intensity of lights defined as the decrease in the strength of a response after repeated presentation of a stimulus that elicits the response ...
Chapter 8 pt. 1: Learning and Classical Conditioning
Chapter 8 pt. 1: Learning and Classical Conditioning

... Criticism of Old School Behaviorists: They Ignore Biological Predispositions ...
Classical Conditioning
Classical Conditioning

... ► We are not born with a blueprint of how to survive, we learn by experience. We have adaptability – the capacity to cope with our changing environments. ...
chapter6
chapter6

... • Varied number of correct responses must be made to get a reinforcer; produces greater resistance to extinction than fixed ratio schedule ...
contents - Insight Publications
contents - Insight Publications

... D. the gradual decrease in the strength or rate of a conditioned response when the conditioned stimulus is no longer presented. Question 29 In classical conditioning, spontaneous recovery is A. ...
Glossary Unit 4 VCE 2005
Glossary Unit 4 VCE 2005

... the condition or behaviour in an experiment that reflects the effects of the independent variable. What is measured in the experiment. techniques used to organise, analyse, describe and summarise important features of data, to aid interpretation and communication neither experimenter nor participant ...
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Perhaps the most important
INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION Perhaps the most important

... Another contributor from Russia whose name deserves to be mentioned is Vladimir Bekhterev. He was born in 1857 and died in 1927. He studied under Wilhelm Wundt, the psychologist who established the first psychological laboratory at Leipzig, Germany. One of the major contributions of Bekhterev is his ...
Midterm 1 - University of California, Berkeley
Midterm 1 - University of California, Berkeley

... 84%, .33. Chapter 3. Split-brain people have had their corpus callosum (the axons that connect the right and left hemispheres of the cerebral cortex) severed. The left hemisphere experiences the world through the right side of the body, and the right does so through the left side. For most people, t ...
Unit 6- Learning
Unit 6- Learning

... IE. Some pigeons have been trained to be able to distinguish between Bach and Stravinsky. IE. If the goal of a teacher is to get all students to strive for 100% accuracy on their spelling tests, then every time a student improves on successive spelling tests they should be rewarded. NOT just reward ...
Chapter 6: Learning - Doral Academy Preparatory
Chapter 6: Learning - Doral Academy Preparatory

... Q1. A group of ranchers attempts to discourage coyotes from attacking their sheep by placing a substance on the wool of the sheep that makes coyotes violently ill if they eat it.Very quickly, the coyotes avoid the sheep entirely. In this scenario, what are the UCS, CS, and CR, respectively? (A) The ...
Ch03
Ch03

... • Adapt to that characteristic by extended exposure • Re-measure the sensitivity to range of the stimulus characteristic ...
AP Study Guide for Chapter 7- Learning
AP Study Guide for Chapter 7- Learning

... or conditioning process. In this stage, some response is being associated with some stimulus to the point where we can say the organism (person, animal, etc.) has "acquired" the response. During this stage the response is strengthened (reinforced) so that it is truly "learned".) Extinction (reductio ...
AP Study Guide for Chapter 7- Learning
AP Study Guide for Chapter 7- Learning

... or conditioning process. In this stage, some response is being associated with some stimulus to the point where we can say the organism (person, animal, etc.) has "acquired" the response. During this stage the response is strengthened (reinforced) so that it is truly "learned".) Extinction (reductio ...
Psychology Review
Psychology Review

... 14) reinforcement schedules ...
Introduction to Psychology - Ms. Kelly's AP Psychology Website
Introduction to Psychology - Ms. Kelly's AP Psychology Website

... place without any choice. ...
chapter 5 learning lecture notes
chapter 5 learning lecture notes

... nausea from that same taste. Taste aversions demonstrate that classical conditioning can occur even when there is a considerable delay between the CS (taste) and UCS (nauseous sensations). 7. Higher order conditioning occurs when a CS acts like a UCS, creating additional conditioned stimuli out of e ...
The Psychologies of Structure, Function, and Development
The Psychologies of Structure, Function, and Development

... the structure of language and speech. Transformational analyses have been concerned with the complex coordinations necessary to generate grammatical sentences or comprehensible phonetic utterances. Recognizing that the way a sentence or utterance ends interacts with characteristics of the earlier pa ...
Chapter 24
Chapter 24

... 38. A(n) __________ is any form of energy that the animal body is able to detect with its receptors. A) transducer B) stimulus C) abducens D) sensor E) perception 39. All of the following specific receptors, except __________, have been identified in invertebrates. A) chemoreceptors B) georeceptors ...
Operant and Cognitive Learning
Operant and Cognitive Learning

... Skinner – thought this was nonsense Tolman – studied rats in mazes and felt that rats could learn trough observation, not just reward (cognitive maps) Bandura ...
CHAPTER 6: LEARNING
CHAPTER 6: LEARNING

... Chapter 6 Section 3: Cognitive Factors in Learning ...
Neuron Powerpoint
Neuron Powerpoint

... • After entering the eye and being focused by the lens, light waves strike the retina. • The rods in the eye sensitive to light • The cons in the eye color-sensitive • These convert the light into the neural impulses, which are coded by the retina before going to the ...
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Psychophysics

Psychophysics quantitatively investigates the relationship between physical stimuli and the sensations and perceptions they affect. Psychophysics has been described as ""the scientific study of the relation between stimulus and sensation"" or, more completely, as ""the analysis of perceptual processes by studying the effect on a subject's experience or behaviour of systematically varying the properties of a stimulus along one or more physical dimensions"".Psychophysics also refers to a general class of methods that can be applied to study a perceptual system. Modern applications rely heavily on threshold measurement, ideal observer analysis, and signal detection theory.Psychophysics has widespread and important practical applications. For example, in the study of digital signal processing, psychophysics has informed the development of models and methods of lossy compression. These models explain why humans perceive very little loss of signal quality when audio and video signals are formatted using lossy compression.
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