Stimulus is a reason, and response is the respose to that
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A stimulus is an external event that triggers a response in an organism. A response is the reaction or behavior that an organism exhibits as a result of a stimulus. In short, a stimulus is the input, while a response is the output.
A stimulus is an external or internal event that triggers a reaction in an organism, while a response is the reaction or behavior elicited by the stimulus. In simpler terms, the stimulus is what causes a reaction, and the response is the reaction itself.
A stimulus is an external event or cue that triggers a reaction in an organism, while a response is the specific reaction or behavior that follows the presentation of a stimulus. In simpler terms, a stimulus is something that causes a response.
An unconditioned response is automatic and unlearned, triggered by a specific stimulus. A conditioned response, on the other hand, is learned through association with a neutral stimulus that was previously paired with an unconditioned stimulus.
A response caused by a neutral stimulus is known as a conditioned response. This occurs when the neutral stimulus becomes associated with a unconditioned stimulus through conditioning, leading to a learned response.
Classical conditioning involves the pairing of a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus to create a conditioned response. The key elements include an unconditioned stimulus that naturally triggers a response, a neutral stimulus that initially does not elicit a response, and the pairing of the two stimuli to produce a conditioned response. Over time, the neutral stimulus alone can evoke the conditioned response.