Examples of using Classical conditioning in English and their translations into Hungarian
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Pavlov and classical conditioning.
The second sort of learning is known as classical conditioning.
In a classical conditioning procedure.
This is often called classical conditioning.
Classical conditioning was discovered by Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov 1902.
Main article: Classical conditioning.
In psychological parlance this translates into‘classical conditioning'.
Pavlov's Dog- classical conditioning.
This phenomenon became known as Pavlovian or classical conditioning.
Pavlov's Dog- classical conditioning.
This established the basis for condition reflexes and classical conditioning.
Pavlov demonstrated classical conditioning in his experiments with dogs.
This is known in psychology as classical conditioning.
In psychology this is called classical conditioning.
It's classical conditioning- learning that'I just love the smell of the match' or'I just love putting the cigarette in my hand.'.
So part of the training is this classical conditioning.
He conducted research on shaping behavior through positive and negative reinforcement, and demonstrated operant conditioning, a behavior modification technique which he developed in contrast with Ivan Pavlov's classical conditioning.
My methods are based on classical conditioning techniques.
An ideal example is in Ivan Pavlov's study on classical conditioning.
They can learn using habituation, desensitization, classical conditioning, and operant conditioning, and positive and negative reinforcement.
This kind of conditioning of a reflex is called classical conditioning.
In psychology this is called classical conditioning.
Pavlov's experiments with dogs provide the most familiar example of the classical conditioning procedure.
Ivan Pavlov, as mentioned earlier,was a Russian physiologist who discovered classical conditioning after conducting experiments with dogs.
Rescorla, R.A.& Wagner, A.R.(1972) A theory of Pavlovian conditioning: Variations in the effectiveness of reinforcement and nonreinforcement, Classical Conditioning II, A.H. Black& W.F. Prokasy, Eds., pp. 64- 99.
Behavioral approach: classical and operational conditioning.