14. Summarize the components of classical conditioning.
Classical conditioning is a type of learning where one learns to link two or more stimuli together. The components of classical conditioning are a neutral stimulus, a unconditioned response, a unconditioned stimulus, a conditioned response, and a conditioned stimulus.
Neutral stimulus is a stimulus that has no response before conditioning.
Unconditioned response is a naturally occurring response.
Unconditioned stimulus is a stimulus that naturally triggers a response.
Conditioned response is a learned response to a previously neutral stimulus.
Conditioned stimulus is at first a irrelevant stimulus but after association with a unconditioned stimulus triggers a conditioned response.
Examples
This website explains each one.
The picture explains classical conditioning also.
Neutral stimulus is a stimulus that has no response before conditioning.
Unconditioned response is a naturally occurring response.
Unconditioned stimulus is a stimulus that naturally triggers a response.
Conditioned response is a learned response to a previously neutral stimulus.
Conditioned stimulus is at first a irrelevant stimulus but after association with a unconditioned stimulus triggers a conditioned response.
Examples
This website explains each one.
The picture explains classical conditioning also.