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Classical Conditioning - Ivan Pavlov

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    Narrator: Behavioral psychologists have
    come up with new views,
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    not only of animal behavior,
    but of human nature as well.
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    And these views all concern a process
    that we take for granted: learning.
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    Because we are all truly born to learn.
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    Ironically, one of the most important figures
    in the study of learning, Ivan Pavlov,
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    wasn't concerned with the subject at all.
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    At least, not at first.
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    Pavlov, a noted Russian scientist,
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    won the Nobel Prize for Physiology
    and Medicine in 1904.
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    As this original footage shows, Pavlov
    was initially interested in digestion
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    and the action of the salivary glands.
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    By diverting the saliva of dogs into test
    tubes, he could precisely measure
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    if and how much they salivated
    during digestion.
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    When food was presented,
    the dog salivated quickly,
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    an inherited salivary reflex.
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    But over repeated testings,
    a strange thing happened.
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    The dog salivated
    before contact with the food.
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    Just the sight of the food was enough
    to stimulate their drooling.
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    Then, just seeing the food dish, or even
    hearing the footsteps of Pavlov or his assistants,
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    was enough to trigger this built-in reflex.
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    What was going on to elicit this response?
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    Pavlov decided to find out,
    by systematically varying the stimuli
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    and measuring the dogs' reaction.
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    [Metronome clicking]
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    Metronomes, lights, and bells
    were all used as stimuli,
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    and they all worked as stand-ins for
    the food.
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    What mattered was not the kind of
    stimulus that was used,
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    but the fact that it reliably signaled
    that food was on the way.
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    ♫ Electronic Music ♫
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    Pavlov had discovered a fundamental
    type of learning called "Classical Conditioning."
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    An original stimulus elicits an automatic
    unlearned response.
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    Both stimulus and response
    happen naturally. They are unconditioned.
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    Then a second, neutral stimulus, that never
    elicits the unconditional response by itself,
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    is introduced just before the presentation
    of the original stimulus.
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    [bell rings]
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    [bell rings]
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    [bell rings]
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    If the neutral or signaling stimulus is
    presented alone,
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    and a response occurs, as if
    the original stimulus were still there,
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    we say that conditioning has taken place.
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    [bell rings]
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    The arbitrary neutral stimulus
    becomes a conditioned stimulus.
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    [bell rings]
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    The reverse is also true.
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    Pavlov and others studied the extinction
    over time of such conditioned responses.
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    [bell rings]
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    When the subject learns that the conditioned
    stimulus no longer signals a desired event,
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    [bell rings]
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    the acquisition process is reversed
    as the learned connection is gradually weakened.
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    [bell rings continuously]
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    Pavlov's work, and the work of those who
    followed him, led to a remarkable conclusion,
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    and that is,
    any stimulus an organism can perceive
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    is capable of eliciting any reaction
    the organism is capable of making.
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    This means that virtually any sound, sight, or smell
    can influence the way our muscles tense or relax,
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    our moods fluctuate, or even the way our
    attitudes are formed.
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    For instance, if I say "Relax," and then do this,
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    [gun shot]
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    you're going to be startled and upset.
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    After five or six pairings of "relax",
    [gun shot]
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    just saying the word "relax"
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    is going to generate a negative response,
    rather than its usual learned reaction.
Title:
Classical Conditioning - Ivan Pavlov
Description:

Pavlov's work on conditioned responses.

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
03:55

English subtitles

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