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Collection of extinction in operant and classical (33)
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Elements of classical conditioning: Extinction process demonstrated through a graph tracking salivary response in Pavlov's dog experiment.
Clear table comparing classical and operant conditioning, showing key differences in response type, timing, and learner involvement.
Classical Conditioning: A diagram showing the strength of conditioned stimulus over time, highlighting acquisition, extinction, and spontaneous recovery.
Explanation of extinction in operant conditioning, showing how response rates decline when reinforcement is removed.
Graph illustrating the acquisition, extinction, and spontaneous recovery of a conditioned response (CR) over time, showing the strength of CR rising during acquisition (CS + UCS), decreasing during extinction (CS alone), and partially recovering after a pause.
Diagram illustrating the process of acquisition, extinction, and spontaneous recovery in classical conditioning.
Diagram depicting the process of classical conditioning, including acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, and the effect of a pause on conditioned response strength.
Extinction in operant conditioning: behavior response frequency over time after reinforcement is removed.
Classical vs. Operant Conditioning: Examples of Pavlov's dog and doing chores to explain learning theories.
Key differences between operant and classical conditioning extinction, highlighting response decrease and aggression in operant conditioning.
Detailed comparison chart illustrating the key differences between classical and operant conditioning in psychology.
Overview of operant conditioning, a form of learning where response likelihood is determined by consequences, as defined by B.F. Skinner.
Classical conditioning experiment demonstrating how a neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus through association with an unconditioned stimulus.
Graph illustrating the process of classical conditioning, including acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, and re-extinction.
Extinction of a classically conditioned response: Acquisition, extinction, and spontaneous recovery in classical conditioning.
Slide explaining spontaneous recovery and second extinction in classical conditioning, referencing Pavlov's experiments and Myers' Psychology text.