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View synonyms for conditioned response

conditioned response

noun

, Psychology.
  1. a response that becomes associated with a previously unrelated stimulus as a result of pairing the stimulus with another stimulus normally yielding the response.


conditioned response

noun

  1. psychol a response that is transferred from the second to the first of a pair of stimuli. A well-known Pavlovian example is salivation by a dog when it hears a bell ring, because food has always been presented when the bell has been rung previously Also called (esp formerly)conditioned reflex See also classical conditioning unconditioned response
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

conditioned response

  1. In psychology , the response made by a person or animal after learning to associate an experience with a neutral or arbitrary stimulus . Conditioned response experiments by Ivan Pavlov ( see Pavlov's dogs ) paired a neutral stimulus (sounding a bell) with a natural response (salivating) by associating the bell with the presentation of food. Conditioned response experiments by B. F. Skinner and other behaviorists ( see behaviorism ) associated an arbitrary action (an animal's pressing a lever) with a positive reward (presentation of food) or a negative reward (an electric shock).
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Notes

Response conditioning is used in behavior modification . Stop-smoking clinics, for example, may use an electric shock whenever a patient lights up. The patient will then associate smoking with the unpleasant experience of the shock.
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Word History and Origins

Origin of conditioned response1

First recorded in 1930–35
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Example Sentences

If Vance were to be believed, he had been living under a rock, poked his head out one day and read some horrible things about Trump and as a conditioned response – he believed them.

From Salon

It can be easy to dismiss micro expressions as conditioned responses taught by movies, television or other widely available visual stimulus.

What we really are, Puett says, is “a messy and potentially ugly bunch of stuff”, a collection of emotions and conditioned responses, with no guiding inner core.

But if you pick this snooze strategy, your body can’t learn the conditioned response between hearing the alarm and getting up.

"Create a gap between impulse and conditioned response," she advises.

From US News

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