5.6
Q1: How did Watson and Rayner demonstrate classical conditioning with Little Albert?
Watson and Rayner paired a white rat (neutral stimulus) with a loud noise (unconditioned stimulus) that naturally triggered fear in nine-month-old Little Albert. After repeated pairings, Albert developed fear of the rat alone (conditioned response). This landmark experiment illustrated how classical conditioning creates learned fear responses in humans.
Q2: What is stimulus generalization and how did it appear in Little Albert's case?
Stimulus generalization occurs when a conditioned response extends to similar stimuli beyond the original conditioned stimulus. Little Albert's fear generalized from the white rat to rabbits, cats, and even furry objects like Santa Claus masks. This demonstrates how conditioned responses can spread across related stimuli through generalization, discrimination, and extinction.
Q3: How does the placebo effect demonstrate classical conditioning principles?
When a placebo (neutral stimulus) is repeatedly paired with an active drug (unconditioned stimulus) that produces therapeutic effects, the placebo alone eventually elicits similar physiological responses (conditioned response). This shows how associative learning creates real physiological changes, highlighting the importance of controlling for placebo effects in clinical drug trials.
Q4: Why might someone develop taste aversion after a single meal?
Taste aversion develops when a specific food (neutral stimulus) is paired with nausea or illness (unconditioned stimulus), creating an aversion to that food (conditioned response). This learned aversion can occur after just one pairing, demonstrating classical conditioning's efficiency in promoting survival by helping organisms avoid potentially harmful substances.
Q5: How does environmental context increase overdose risk in drug users?
When a drug user repeatedly consumes a drug in a specific environment, that setting becomes a conditioned stimulus triggering preparatory physiological responses. If the drug is used in a different location, the body lacks these conditioned responses and isn't adequately prepared, significantly increasing overdose risk due to the absence of environmental cues.
Q6: How do therapists use aversive conditioning to treat alcohol dependence?
Therapists pair alcohol consumption (neutral stimulus) with a nausea-inducing agent (unconditioned stimulus) to create an aversion to drinking (conditioned response). This aversive conditioning technique, part of a larger treatment plan, helps individuals reduce alcohol consumption by establishing a negative association with the behavior.
Q7: What are the main applications of classical conditioning in everyday life?
Classical conditioning explains fear development, the placebo effect, taste aversion, and drug habituation in daily life. These real world applications of classical conditioning demonstrate how associative learning profoundly impacts human behavior and physiological responses, making it essential for understanding everyday psychological phenomena.
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