Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

animal behaviour

    • automata theory
      • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

        In automata theory: The finite automata of McCulloch and Pitts

        Certain responses of an animal to stimuli are known by controlled observation, and, since the pioneering work of a Spanish histologist, Santiago Ramón y Cajal, in the latter part of the 19th and early part of the 20th century, many neural structures have been well known.…

        Read More
      • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

        In automata theory: Input: events that affect an automaton

        … in the future, while a stimulus is a collection of individual histories extending over the past and including the present. The logical construction implies a behaviour in the guise of a listing of responses to all possible stimuli. Reciprocally, for a given behaviour of the type defined, the possible structure…

        Read More
    • conditioning
      • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

        In conditioning

        Stimulus-response (S-R) theories are central to the principles of conditioning. They are based on the assumption that human behaviour is learned. One of the early contributors to the field, American psychologist Edward L. Thorndike, postulated the Law of Effect, which stated that those behavioral responses…

        Read More

    human behaviour

      • Descartes’ theory
        • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

          In René Descartes: Physics, physiology, and morals of René Descartes

          …arc that begins with external stimuli—as, for example, when a soldier sees the enemy, feels fear, and flees. The mind cannot change bodily reactions directly—for example, it cannot will the body to fight—but by altering mental attitudes, it can change the pineal vibrations from those that cause fear and fleeing…

          Read More
      • education theory
        • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

          In pedagogy: Conditioning and behaviourist theories

          …learner comes to respond to stimuli other than the one originally calling for the response (as when dogs are taught to salivate at the sound of a bell). One says in such a situation that a new stimulus is learned. In the human situation, learning to recognize the name of…

          Read More
      • language analysis
        • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

          In linguistics: Structural linguistics in America

          …simply the relationship between a stimulus and a verbal response. Because science was still a long way from being able to give a comprehensive account of most stimuli, no significant or interesting results could be expected from the study of meaning for some considerable time, and it was preferable, as…

          Read More
      • learning theories
        • In learning: Types of learning

          S-R theories failed to account for many learned phenomena, however, and seemed overly reductive because they ignored a subject’s inner activities. Tolman headed another, less “objective” camp that held that associations involved a stimulus and a subjective sensory impression (S-S).

          Read More
      • motivation
        • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

          In motivation: Behaviourism

          …in environmental stimulation (S); their S-R psychology subsequently gained popularity, becoming the basis for the school of behaviourism. By the 1920s, the concept of instinct as proposed by theorists such as James and McDougall had been roundly criticized and fell into disrepute. Behaviourism dominated the thinking of motivational theorists and…

          Read More
      • perception
        • Stimulus _____ is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

          In perception

          …humans, the process whereby sensory stimulation is translated into organized experience. That experience, or percept, is the joint product of the stimulation and of the process itself. Relations found between various types of stimulation (e.g., light waves and sound waves) and their associated percepts suggest inferences that can be made…

          Read More
      • opposition by Miller
        • In George A. Miller

          …and Karl Pribram proposed that stimulus-response (an isolated behavioral sequence used to assist research) be replaced by a different hypothesized behavioral sequence, which they called the TOTE (test, operate, test, exit). In the TOTE sequence a goal is first planned, and a test is performed to determine whether the goal…

          Read More
      • social behaviour model
        • In social psychology: Interaction processes

          …nature of social behaviour, the stimulus–response model (in which every social act is seen as a response to the preceding act of another individual) has been generally found helpful but incomplete. Linguistic models that view social behaviour as being governed by principles analogous to the rules of a game or…

          Read More

      What is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another?

      semantic generalization. Stimulus ... is the tendency for a response to be elicited more by one stimulus than another. generalization is to discrimination. to be elicited more by one stimulus than another.

      What is unconditioned stimulus in psychology?

      An unconditioned stimulus is a stimulus that leads to an automatic response. In Pavlov's experiment, the food was the unconditioned stimulus. An unconditioned response is an automatic response to a stimulus. The dogs salivating for food is the unconditioned response in Pavlov's experiment.

      When one stimulus becomes a CS another stimulus with which it was previously paired can also become a CS during?

      Psychology of Learning Ch. 4.

      What occurs when a stimulus is presented repeatedly?

      In the case of habituation, repeated presentation of the same stimulus produces decreasing responses to it. In the example of the loud crash, if it keeps sounding repeatedly every twenty seconds, the startle to it will decrease in further presentations.