Conditioning Health Dictionary

Conditioning: From 2 Different Sources


The formation of a specific response to a specific stimulus.

In classical conditioning, a stimulus that consistently evokes a particular response is paired repeatedly with a second stimulus that would not normally produce the response.

Eventually, the second stimulus begins to produce the response whether the first stimulus is present or not.

In operant conditioning, attempts to modify behaviour are made through a system of rewards and/or punishments.

The theory that inappropriate behaviour patterns in some psychological disorders are learned through conditioning and can be modified by the same process underlies behavioural psychology (see behaviour therapy).

Health Source: BMA Medical Dictionary
Author: The British Medical Association
n. the establishment of new behaviour by modifying the stimulus/response associations. In classical conditioning a stimulus not normally associated with a particular response is presented together with the stimulus that evokes the response automatically. This is repeated until the first stimulus evokes the response by itself (see conditioned reflex). In operant conditioning a response is rewarded (or punished) each time it occurs, so that in time it comes to occur more (or less) frequently (see reinforcement).
Health Source: Oxford | Concise Colour Medical Dictionary
Author: Jonathan Law, Elizabeth Martin

Air Conditioning

A system that controls the purity, humidity, and temperature of the air in a building. Contaminated air-conditioning systems may cause legionnaires’ disease and humidifier fever (a lung disease causing coughing and breathing difficulty).... air conditioning



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