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Purpose of Stimulus Discrimination
Organisms use stimulus discrimination to distinguish between similar stimuli in their environment. This ability enables them to respond appropriately to different situations, such as differentiating between a sound that predicts a threatening event and one that does not.
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Psychology @ OpenStax
Ch.6 Learning - Psychology @ OpenStax
Introduction to Psychology @ OpenStax Course
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OpenStax Psychology (2nd ed.) Textbook
Psychology
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Example of Stimulus Discrimination: Pavlov's Dogs
Example of Stimulus Discrimination: Tiger the Cat
Example of Stimulus Discrimination: Moisha the Cancer Patient
A service dog is trained to nudge its owner's leg when it hears a specific, high-pitched smoke alarm. During training, the dog is exposed to various other sounds, such as a doorbell, a telephone ringing, and a lower-pitched fire truck siren, but it is only rewarded for responding to the smoke alarm. After training, the dog reliably nudges its owner at the sound of the smoke alarm but ignores the other sounds. Which statement best explains the dog's behavior?
Purpose of Stimulus Discrimination
Pavlov's Dogs Stimulus Discrimination
Tiger the Cat Stimulus Discrimination
Moisha the Cancer Patient Stimulus Discrimination
Stimulus Discrimination of Tiger the Cat