Operant and Classical Conditioning To Facilitating Learning
Operant conditioning relies on reinforcement of behaviors while classical conditioning associates stimuli. Operant conditioning involves a feedback loop between behavior and reinforcer whereas classical conditioning associates a conditioned stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus. Both forms of learning involve associations but operant conditioning associates a behavior with a reinforcer while classical conditioning associates stimuli. The study found that operant learning can facilitate classical training by forming classical associations during operant conditioning.
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Operant and Classical Conditioning To Facilitating Learning
Operant conditioning relies on reinforcement of behaviors while classical conditioning associates stimuli. Operant conditioning involves a feedback loop between behavior and reinforcer whereas classical conditioning associates a conditioned stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus. Both forms of learning involve associations but operant conditioning associates a behavior with a reinforcer while classical conditioning associates stimuli. The study found that operant learning can facilitate classical training by forming classical associations during operant conditioning.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Operant and Classical Conditioning to facilitating Learning
Ever since learning and memory have been studied experimentally,
the relationship between operant and classical conditioning has been controversial. Operant conditioning is any form of conditioning that essentially depends on the animal's behavior. It relies on operant behavior.
Classical conditioning is often described as the transfer of the
response-eliciting property of a biologically significant stimulus (US) to a new stimulus (CS) without that property. Thus, classical conditioning can be understood as learning about the temporal (or causal, relationships between external stimuli to allow for appropriate preparatory behavior before biologically significant events.
In contrast to classical conditioning, the processes underlying
operant conditioning may be diverse and are still poorly understood. Technically speaking, the feedback loop between the animal's behavior and the reinforcer (US) is closed. ). All operant conditioning paradigms have in common that the animal first has to “find” the motor output controlling the US (operant behavior). Thus, whereas in classical conditioning a CS–US association is thought to be responsible for the learning effect, in operant conditioning a behavior–reinforcer (B–US) association is regarded as the primary process. A thorough comparison at all levels from molecules to behavior will be necessary to elucidate the processes that are shared and those that are distinct between operant and classical conditioning. In the present study, only the behavioral level is addressed.
Conclusion
I therefore conclude that the operant behavior has a facilitating
effect on the classical training. In addition, we show that an operantly learned stimulus is successfully transferred from the behavior of the training to a different behavior. This result unequivocally demonstrates that during operant conditioning classical associations can be formed.