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conditioning

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conditioning

In psychology, two major principles of behaviour modification.

In classical conditioning, described by Russian psychologist Ivan Pavlov, a new stimulus can evoke an automatic response by being repeatedly associated with a stimulus that naturally provokes that response. For example, the sound of a bell repeatedly associated with food will eventually trigger salivation, even if sounded without food being presented. In operant conditioning, described by US psychologists Edward Lee Thorndike (1874–1949) and B F Skinner, the frequency of a voluntary response can be increased by following it with a reinforcer or reward.



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The papers, as they appeared from month to month, were not the product of those unities of time and place which were the happy conditioning of
In this state Frank Churchill had found her, she trembling and conditioning, they loud and insolent.
You've been conditioning and training fighters all your life.
 
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