🧠ap psychology review

key term - Neutral Stimulus

Citation:

Definition

A neutral stimulus is something in our environment that doesn’t produce an automatic response until we learn to associate it with another stimulus.

Theoretical Perspectives

In behaviorism, a neutral stimulus is any stimulus that initially produces no specific response other than focusing attention. When used in classical conditioning, it becomes associated with an unconditioned stimulus to elicit a conditioned response.

Study And Research Findings

Ivan Pavlov's seminal work on classical conditioning highlighted the neutral stimulus concept. His experiments with dogs demonstrated how a previously neutral stimulus, like a bell, could become associated with food and trigger salivation—a conditioned response.

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