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conditioning

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conditioning

[kən′dish·ən·iŋ]
(electronics)
Equipment modifications or adjustments necessary to match transmission levels and impedances or to provide equalization between facilities.
(graphic arts)
Restoration of microfilm for use after it has been stored for a period of time.
(science and technology)
Subjecting a material or organism to a stipulated treatment or stimulus so that it will respond in a uniform and desired manner to subsequent testing or processing.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

conditioning

a term used in LEARNING THEORY or BEHAVIOURISM meaning the process of training or changing behaviour by association and reinforcement. There are two basic types of conditioning – classical and operant.

Classical conditioning was defined by I. Pavlov (1911) in his research on the salivary reflex in dogs. He observed that if a neutral stimulus (NS) is paired with an unconditioned stimulus (UCS) so that they become ‘associated’, then the NS develops the same ability to evoke a response as the UCS. Thus the NS becomes a conditioned stimulus (CS) and the response becomes a conditioned response (CR). This type of conditioning occurs only in involuntary behaviours such as salivation, sweating, heart rate and other behaviours controlled by the autonomic nervous system, and such a conditioned response may therefore be known as a CONDITIONED REFLEX. Reinforcement is delivered regardless of response, as it precedes it and is typically also the UCS (food in the case of Pavlovs experiment).

Operant or instrumental conditioning was defined and extensively researched by B.F. Skinner (1953). It involves training voluntary responses as the reinforcement is only delivered after the response and is contingent upon the response. Learning or conditioning involves the development of an association or bond between a stimulus and a response by reinforcing responses when they occur. Because reinforcement follows response, respondent behaviour can be manipulated by varying when the reinforcement is given (schedules of reinforcement). Learning is more resistant to extinction if the schedule of reinforcement used in training is related to the responses and is unpredictable. An example of this is gambling on a fruit machine. Extinction is the fading and disappearance of behaviour through non-reinforcement, e.g. socially unacceptable behaviour should be disregarded and not reinforced. Behaviour can be shaped towards a desirable end by the reinforcement of successive approximations to this. In this way, animals can be taught to do ‘tricks’ which would not be found in their normal repertoire of behaviour. Shaping principles underlie much of the control we exert over each other behaviour, especially childrens.

Collins Dictionary of Sociology, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2000

conditioning

Extra cost options in a private telephone line that improve performance by reducing distortion and amplifying weak signals.
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References in periodicals archive
(3) In Pavlovian conditioning, a previously neutral stimulus, such as a tone or light, becomes associated with an unconditional stimulus, such as food, to the extent that it will, by itself, evoke a response related to the unconditional response.
Granted, while the original theoretical basis for Pavlovian conditioning has been expanded and modified over the years (Hollis, 1997; Mineke & Zinburg, 2006), the fundamentals and clinical application remain rooted in Pavlov's respondent conditioning model.
In a law enforcement setting, Pavlovian conditioning involves using a systematic series of desensitization techniques and rewards to condition subjects to overcome their natural reluctance to use deadly force.
The argument I have developed, stated briefly, is that we do not commit crimes because our conscience holds us back.(10) Conscience is the product of Pavlovian conditioning. Pavlovian conditioning pairs a neutral stimulus, (CS) with another, unconditioned stimulus (UCS) that has some beneficial or harmful effect which produces a response (UCR).
He emphasizes studying context as if this were a challenge to psychology, although it is already a part of the mainstream (see Bouton, 1933, published in one of the most conservative psychological journals, where a survey of Pavlovian conditioning has context as the first word of the title).
Several investigators now suggest that imprinting is a form of associative learning Hollis et al., 1991), perhaps a variant of Pavlovian conditioning (Bolhuis et al., 1990; Suboski, 1990), in which the imprinting object provides both the conditioned and biologically significant unconditioned stimulus.
There exists a substantial literature on long-term retention of Pavlovian conditioning effects (e.g., Coulter, Collier, & Campbell, 1976).
This edition has been updated to incorporate recent research and has new material on Pavlovian conditioning, extinction of conditioned behavior, consolidation, reconsolidation, and memory, as well as new findings on response allocation and behavioral economics.
Nonconscious associative learning: Pavlovian conditioning of the skin conductance responses to masked fear-relevant facial stimuli.
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