- Generalization
- Extinction
- Discrimination
- Spontaneous recovery
No category found.
- Responding to only the conditioned stimulus
- Responding to stimuli similar to the conditioned stimulus
- Failing to respond to the conditioned stimulus
- Responding to the unconditioned stimulus
- Is learned through association
- Satisfies a basic biological need
- Is given in exchange for tokens
- Is socially approved
- Behaviors followed by satisfying consequences are more likely to be repeated
- Behaviors followed by unsatisfying consequences are more likely to be repeated
- Learning occurs through observation
- All behaviors are innate
- Shaping
- Aversion therapy
- Flooding
- Systematic desensitization
- Operant conditioning
- Classical conditioning
- Social learning theory
- Gestalt therapy
- Classical conditioning
- Operant conditioning
- Cognitive therapy
- Humanistic psychology
- A person's belief in their ability to succeed in specific situations
- A person's general level of confidence
- The ability to control impulses
- The tendency to imitate others' behavior
- Reinforcing a behavior directly
- Observing someone else receive reinforcement for a behavior
- Punishing a behavior indirectly
- Learning through trial and error
- Vicarious reinforcement
- Self-efficacy
- Modeling
- Response cost
- Classical conditioning
- Operant conditioning
- Observational learning
- Cognitive psychology
- Punishing undesirable behaviors
- Reinforcing successive approximations to a desired behavior
- Extinguishing a learned behavior
- Pairing a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus
- Fixed-interval
- Variable-interval
- Fixed-ratio
- Variable-ratio
- After a specific number of responses
- After a specific amount of time
- After an unpredictable number of responses
- After an unpredictable amount of time
- Giving a child extra chores for bad grades
- Taking away a child's video game for hitting their sibling
- Yelling at a dog for barking
- Spanking a child for disobedience
- Adding an undesirable stimulus to decrease behavior
- Taking away an undesirable stimulus to increase behavior
- Adding a desirable stimulus to increase behavior
- Taking away a desirable stimulus to decrease behavior
- Taking away a chore for good behavior
- Giving a child a toy for cleaning their room
- Yelling at a child for misbehaving
- Grounding a teenager for breaking curfew
- Punisher
- Discriminative stimulus
- Reinforcer
- Neutral stimulus
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