Chapter 4 - Basic Phenomena and Various Complexities of Classical Conditioning

1234567891011
Across
  1. 3. A procedure in which a stimulus signals whether a CS is likely to be followed by a US and thereby controls whether the CS will elicit a CR (two words; no space in between).
  2. 6. ____ conditioning is the process whereby a neutral stimulus that is associated with a CS also becomes a CS (two words; no space in between).
  3. 7. The process of developing and strengthening a conditioned response through repeated pairings of a CS with a US.
  4. 8. The process whereby a conditioned response can be weakened or eliminated when the CS is repeatedly presented in the absence of the US
  5. 10. The phenomenon whereby the more salient member of a compound stimulus is more readily conditioned as a CS and thereby interferes with conditioning of the less salient member.
  6. 11. The phenomenon whereby the presence of an established CS interferes with conditioning of a new CS.
Down
  1. 1. The sudden recovery of a conditioned response during an extinction procedure when a novel stimulus is introduced.
  2. 2. The phenomenon whereby a familiar stimulus is more difficult to condition as a CS than is an unfamiliar stimulus (two words; no space in between).
  3. 4. The reappearance of a conditioned response to a CS following a rest period after extinction (two words; no space in between).
  4. 5. The tendency for a CR to occur in the presence of a stimulus that is similar to the CS.
  5. 9. ____ stimulus is a complex stimulus that consists of the simultaneous presentation of two or more individual stimuli.