conditioned avoidance
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A learned behavioral response: "conditioned avoidance" refers to a specific type of conditioned response where an organism learns to perform a behavior to prevent or avoid an expected unpleasant or harmful stimulus. It is a form of learning based on anticipation.
Examples of Usage
- Noun:
- The experiment demonstrated a clear conditioned avoidance in the rats, as they learned to press a lever to avoid the electric shock.
- Therapy for certain phobias often involves reducing the conditioned avoidance associated with the feared object.
Advanced Usage
- "to establish a conditioned avoidance": to create or develop this learned avoidance behavior through training.
- Researchers worked to establish a conditioned avoidance to the specific sound.
- "conditioned avoidance response (CAR)": a more formal, technical term often used interchangeably with "conditioned avoidance."
- The study measured the latency of the conditioned avoidance response.
Variants and Related Words
- Conditioned response (CR): a broad term for any learned response to a previously neutral stimulus.
- Avoidance conditioning: the learning process that results in a conditioned avoidance.
- Conditioned stimulus (CS): the originally neutral signal that comes to trigger the avoidance behavior.
- Aversive stimulus: the unpleasant event the behavior is designed to avoid.
Synonyms
- Learned avoidance
- Conditioned avoidance response (CAR)
Related Phrases
- Active avoidance: a type of conditioned avoidance where a specific action is required to prevent the aversive event.
- Passive avoidance: a type where the learned behavior involves performing an action to avoid punishment.
Noun
- a conditioned response that anticipates the occurrence of an aversive stimulus