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  • In this video we'll introduce very basic

  • concepts in classical conditioning by simulating Pavlov's

  • experiments with dogs. Now you may be wondering

  • if I'm going to be dealing with human beings why am I

  • looking at a dog? The answer is that the same principles of behaviourism

  • that apply to higher order animals, also apply to us humans.

  • So, when it comes to classical conditioning

  • we aren't that much different from Rover here.

  • We're presenting Rover with a stimulus here- a bell

  • When we ring the bell, there's no response in Rover.

  • That's because dogs just like human beings are not naturally

  • wired to have a response to a bell. Without conditioning

  • there is no response. Therefore, we call the bell a Neutral Stimulus

  • I can ring the bell, repeatedly

  • with no response from Rover.

  • Next, we'll introduce Rover to a new stimuls--the sight of food and water.

  • Rover's natural response to the sight of food and water

  • is to salivate. He wasn't conditioned to have this reaction.

  • It's natural, innate or inborn

  • and automatic not taught, not conditioned. So this stimulus

  • is called an Unconditioned Stimulus and Rover's response is called

  • an Unconditioned Response.

  • Next, we'll simulate Pavlov's experiment.

  • We'll ring the bell and then present Rover with food and water.

  • Rover salivates- not because of the bell

  • which is a Neutral Stimulus but because of the food- the Unconditioned Stimulus

  • Now we are going to repeat this process.

  • If we repeatedly ring the bell before presenting Rover

  • with food, he'll be conditioned to respond to the bell.

  • Now Rover will salivate

  • upon hearing the bell even in the absence of food.

  • This response

  • has been conditioned. It's now a Conditioned Response

  • and the bell has become a Conditioned Stimulus.

  • So to recap,

  • the bell started out as a Neutral Stimulus.

  • The food was an Unconditioned Stimulus. When Rover salivated

  • upon seeing the food, it was an Unconditioned Response.

  • When we repeatedly paired the sound of the bell with

  • the sight of food, Rover was finally conditioned to salivate

  • upon hearing the bell. The bell has now become a Conditioned Stimulus.

  • for Rover and salivating to the sound of the bell

  • is a Conditioned Response in Rover.

  • Behavioural theory tells us that our behaviours have been shaped or

  • conditioned by past experiences in much the same way that Rover

  • has been conditioned to salivate upon hearing that bell, and therefore

  • behaviour modification is possible through conditioning.

In this video we'll introduce very basic

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