Glossary / Lexicon
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
Conditioned stimulus (CS) is a term in Classical conditioning that refers to previously neutral stimulus that, when paired with a natural stimulus, becomes sufficient to elicit a response
Related Articles | |
CS (Conditioned stimulus) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
CS (Conditioned stimulus) refers to an originally neutral stimulus that, through repeated pairings with . . . 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 | |
classical conditioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
classical conditioning refers to the fundamental learning process which was first described by Ivan Pavlov. . . . 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 | |
Conditioned stimulus at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■■ |
Conditioned stimulus refers to a previously neutral stimulus that, after repeated pairings with the unconditioned . . . 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 | |
Compensatory-response model at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
- Compensatory-response model : Compensatory-response model refers to a model of conditioning in which . . . Read More | |
Conditioned emotional response (CER) at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
- Conditioned emotional response (CER) : Conditioned emotional response (CER ) refers to an emotional . . . Read More | |
Conditioned response at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Conditioned response refers to an acquired response to a stimulus that was previously neutral . . . Read More | |
Backward pairing at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Backward pairing is a term in classical conditioning referring to the presentation of the unconditional . . . Read More |