K9 Learning Theory
Classical and Operant and Conditioning
An Introduction to Classical (Respondent) Conditioning
Developed by: W. Huitt and J. Hummel Last Revised: May, 1997
Citation: Huitt, W., & Hummel, J. (1997). An
introduction to classical (respondent) conditioning. Educational Psychology
Interactive. Valdosta, GA: Valdosta State University. Retrieved [date], from
http://chiron.valdosta.edu/whuitt/col/behsys/classcnd.html.
Classical conditioning was the first type of
learning to be discovered and studied within the behaviorist tradition (hence
the name classical). The major theorist in the development of classical
conditioning is Ivan Pavlov, a Russian scientist trained in biology and
medicine (as was his contemporary, Sigmund Freud). Pavlov was studying the
digestive system of dogs and became intrigued with his observation that dogs
deprived of food began to salivate when one of his assistants walked into the
room. He began to investigate this phenomena and established the laws of
classical conditioning. Skinner renamed this type of learning "respondent
conditioning" since in this type of learning, one is responding to an
environmental antecedent.
Major concepts
Classical conditioning is Stimulus (S)
elicits >Response (R) conditioning since the antecedent stimulus (singular)
causes (elicits) the reflexive or involuntary response to occur. Classical
conditioning starts with a reflex: an innate, involuntary behavior elicited or
caused by an antecedent environmental event. For example, if air is blown into
your eye, you blink. You have no voluntary or conscious control over whether
the blink occurs or not.
The specific model for classical
conditioning is:
- Unconditioned Stimulus (US) elicits > Unconditioned
Response (UR): a stimulus will naturally (without learning) elicit or bring
about a relexive response
- Neutral Stimulus (NS) ---> does not elicit the
response of interest: this stimulus (sometimes called an orienting stimulus as
it elicits an orienting response) is a neutral stimulus since it does not
elicit the Unconditioned (or reflexive) Response.
- The Neutral/Orientiing Stimulus (NS) is repeatedly paired
with the Unconditioned/Natural Stimulus (US).
- The NS is transformed into a Conditioned Stimulus (CS);
that is, when the CS is presented by itself, it elicits or causes the CR (which
is the same involuntary response as the UR; the name changes because it is
elicited by a different stimulus. This is written CS elicits > CR.
In classical conditioning no new behaviors
are learned. Instead, an association is developed (through pairing) between the
NS and the US so that the animal / person responds to both events / stimuli
(plural) in the same way; restated, after conditioning, both the US and the CS
will elicit the same involuntary response (the person / animal learns to
respond reflexively to a new stimulus).
The following is a restatement of these
basic principles using figures of Pavlov's original experiments as an
example.
Before conditioning
In order to have classical or respondent
conditioning, there must exist a stimulus that will automatically or
reflexively elicit a specific response. This stimulus is called the
Unconditioned Stimulus or UCS because there is no learning involved in
connecting the stimulus and response. There must also be a stimulus that will
not elicit this specific response, but will elicit an orienting response. This
stimulus is called a Neutral Stimulus or an Orienting Stimulus.

During conditioning
During conditioning, the neutral stimulus
will first be presented, followed by the unconditioned stimulus. Over time, the
learner will develop an association between these two stimuli (i.e., will learn
to make a connection between the two stimuli.)

After conditioning
After conditioning, the previously neutral
or orienting stimulus will elicit the response previously only elicited by the
unconditioned stimulus. The stimulus is now called a conditioned stimulus
because it will now elicit a different response as a result of conditioning or
learning. The response is now called a conditioned response because it is
elicited by a stimulus as a result of learning. The two responses,
unconditioned and conditioned, look the same, but they are elicited by
different stimuli and are therefore given different labels.

In the area of classroom learning, classical
conditioning primarily influences emotional behavior. Things that make us
happy, sad, angry, etc. become associated with neutral stimuli that gain our
attention. For example, if a particular academic subject or remembering a
particular teacher produces emotional feelings in you, those emotions are
probably a result of classical conditioning.
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