Across
- 1. Picking up behaviours by watching others instead of direct experience.
- 4. When a response spreads to things that are similar, not just the original trigger.
- 5. A famous experiment that showed how fear can be learned in a baby.
- 8. A reward pattern where you never know exactly when it will come—like a poker machine.
- 10. When two things need to happen close together in time for learning to occur.
- 13. Special brain cells that activate both when you act and when you see someone else act.
- 15. When a response suddenly reappears after it had seemed gone.
- 17. A type of learning where two things are linked together so one starts to trigger the response of the other.
- 18. Different patterns of giving rewards that change how fast and strong learning is.
- 20. Learning based on rewards and consequences for behaviour.
- 21. Adding something unpleasant to make a behaviour less likely.
- 22. Learning works better when one thing clearly predicts another.
- 23. Removing something unpleasant to increase behaviour.
Down
- 2. The early stage of learning when the link between two things is being built.
- 3. When a learned response slowly disappears because the link is no longer reinforced.
- 6. Rewarding small steps toward a bigger, more complex behaviour.
- 7. The first step in learning from others—you need to notice what’s happening.
- 9. A step-by-step method to reduce phobias by pairing relaxation with fears.
- 11. The idea that some fears are easier to learn because our brains are “wired” to protect us.
- 12. Something that starts out neutral but comes to cause a learned reaction.
- 14. A study showing kids copy aggressive actions they see adults do.
- 16. When people improve just because they believe a treatment will work, even if it’s fake.
- 19. A device used to test how animals learn through rewards or punishments.
