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Higher Order Conditioning: Higher Order Conditioning (also known as Second Order Conditioning) is a classical conditioning term that refers to a situation...
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g) Higher Order Conditioning - a CS can be used to produce a response from another neutral stimulus (can evoke CS). There are a couple of different orders or levels. Let's take a "Pavlovian Dog-like" example to look at the different orders:
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Encyclopedia: Second-order conditioning
In classical conditioning, second-order conditioning or higher-order conditioning is a form of learning in which a stimulus is first made meaningful or consequential for an organism through an initial...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second-order_conditioning |
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In classical conditioning, second-order conditioning or higher-order conditioning is a form of learning in which a stimulus is first made meaningful or...
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In higher-order Pavlovian conditioning (sensory preconditioning and second-order conditioning), the CS is paired with a stimulus that has motivational value...
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Using pavlovian higher-order conditioning paradigms to investigate the neural substrates of emotional learning and memory. This review describes some of the ways higher-order conditioning paradigms can be used to elucidate substrates of learning and memory, primarily focusing on fear conditioning.
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higher order conditioning The use of previously conditioned stimuli to condition further responses, in much the same way as unconditioned stimuli are.
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Definition of higher order conditioning from the online medical dictionary hosted by mondofacto.
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Higher (or second) order conditioning: Classical conditioning does not have to involve pairing an neutral stimulus (NS) with an unconditioned stimulu (US). If an NS is paired with an existing conditioned stimulus (CS), the NS will also become a CS.
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conditioning/higher-order (second-order, third-order, etc.) = (emp, bt) if a classical conditioned response is established, the stimulus of this S-R correlation may serve as the unconditioned stimulus for a new second-order conditioned response, and so on.
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