Glossary / Lexicon
CS (Conditioned stimulus)
CS (Conditioned stimulus) refers to an originally neutral stimulus that, through repeated pairings with an unconditioned stimulus, acquires the ability to elicit the response originally produced only by the unconditioned stimulus
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Conditioned stimulus at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■■■■ |
Conditioned stimulus refers to a previously neutral stimulus that, after repeated pairings with the unconditioned . . . Read More | |
classical conditioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■■■ |
classical conditioning refers to the fundamental learning process which was first described by Ivan Pavlov. . . . Read More | |
Conditioned stimulus (CS) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■■ |
Conditioned stimulus (CS) is a term in Classical conditioning that refers to previously neutral stimulus . . . Read More | |
Conditioned response (CR) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■■ |
- Conditioned response (CR) : Conditioned response refers to an acquired response to a stimulus that . . . Read More | |
CR (Conditioned response) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
CR (Conditioned response) refers to the learned response to a conditioned stimulus (CS); a learned reaction . . . Read More | |
Compensatory-response model at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
- Compensatory-response model : Compensatory-response model refers to a model of conditioning in which . . . Read More | |
Classical conditioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
Classical conditioning refers to a behavioral principle of learning by which a new response is learned . . . Read More | |
Counterconditioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Counterconditioning refers to the process of replacing an undesired response to a stimulus with an acceptable . . . Read More | |
Pseudoconditioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Pseudoconditioning is defined as a temporary elevation in the amplitude of the conditioned response that . . . Read More | |
Conditioned response at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Conditioned response refers to an acquired response to a stimulus that was previously neutral . . . Read More |