Publication Date
In 2025 | 0 |
Since 2024 | 2 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 4 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 14 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 122 |
Descriptor
Conditioning | 76 |
Operant Conditioning | 49 |
Stimuli | 41 |
Reinforcement | 39 |
Animals | 34 |
Classical Conditioning | 28 |
Fear | 27 |
Learning Processes | 26 |
Responses | 22 |
Behavior Modification | 21 |
Brain Hemisphere Functions | 21 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Reports - Evaluative | 172 |
Journal Articles | 164 |
Information Analyses | 8 |
Opinion Papers | 4 |
Reports - Descriptive | 3 |
Guides - Non-Classroom | 2 |
Reports - Research | 2 |
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 1 |
Tests/Questionnaires | 1 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 9 |
Preschool Education | 5 |
Early Childhood Education | 4 |
Elementary Education | 2 |
Postsecondary Education | 2 |
Adult Education | 1 |
Elementary Secondary Education | 1 |
High Schools | 1 |
Kindergarten | 1 |
Middle Schools | 1 |
Audience
Practitioners | 3 |
Administrators | 2 |
Teachers | 2 |
Policymakers | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
Learning Style Inventory | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Ross, Denise E.; Nuzzolo, Robin; Stolfi, Lauren; Natarelli, Sarah – Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2006
Speaker immersion is a tactic that uses multiple establishing operations to increase speaker behavior for individuals with limited mand and tact repertoires. The purpose of this paper was to evaluate the effects of speaker immersion on the number of independent mands, tacts, and autoclitics emitted by young children with verbal delays. In the…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Verbal Operant Conditioning, Reinforcement, Developmental Delays
Rehfeldt, Ruth Anne; Root, Shannon L. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2005
This project examined whether a history of reinforced relational responding would result in derived requesting skills in 3 adults with disabilities. Participants were first taught to request preferred items using pictures; they were then taught conditional discriminations between pictures and their dictated names and between dictated names and…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Severe Mental Retardation, Adults, Skill Development
Holth, Per – Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2005
Joint attention, a synchronizing of the attention of two or more persons, has been an increasing focus of research in cognitive developmental psychology. Research in this area has progressed mainly outside of behavior analysis, and behavior-analytic research and theory has tended to ignore the work on joint attention. It is argued here, on the one…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Autism, Attention Control, Verbal Operant Conditioning
Lattal, Kennon A. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
From its inception in the 1930s until very recent times, the cumulative recorder was the most widely used measurement instrument in the experimental analysis of behavior. It was an essential instrument in the discovery and analysis of schedules of reinforcement, providing the first real-time analysis of operant response rates and patterns. This…
Descriptors: Operant Conditioning, Positive Reinforcement, Behavioral Science Research, Measurement Techniques
Rehfeldt, Ruth Anne; Dixon, Mark R. – Behavior Modification, 2005
Four adults with developmental disabilities were taught to make conditional discriminations between either pictures and their corresponding printed English and Spanish words, or tastes and their corresponding printed English and Spanish words. Participants required more training trials to master the visual-visual conditional discriminations than…
Descriptors: Developmental Disabilities, Conditioning, Visual Discrimination, Spanish
Brembs, Bjorn; de Ibarra, Natalie Hempel – Learning & Memory, 2006
We have used a genetically tractable model system, the fruit fly "Drosophila melanogaster" to study the interdependence between sensory processing and associative processing on learning performance. We investigated the influence of variations in the physical and predictive properties of color stimuli in several different operant-conditioning…
Descriptors: Stimulus Generalization, Stimuli, Discrimination Learning, Simulation
Trent, C. Curtis; Trent, Warren C. – School Business Affairs, 1996
A major source of indoor air contamination in schools originates within the heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning systems (HVAC), with draw-through systems being the worst offenders. Lists provisions for designing an HVAC system and a set of criteria to adhere to when planning new construction or renovations. (nine references) (MLF)
Descriptors: Air Conditioning Equipment, Climate Control, Design Requirements, Elementary Secondary Education
Melchers, Klaus G.; Lachnit, Harold; Shanks, David R. – Learning and Motivation, 2004
In two human skin conductance conditioning experiments we investigated whether processing of stimulus compounds can be influenced by past experience. Participants were either pre-trained with a discrimination problem that could be solved elementally (A+, B-, AB+, C- in Experiment 1 and A+, AB+, C-, CB- in Experiment 2) or one that required a…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Stimulation, Classical Conditioning, Learning Processes
Friman, Patrick C.; Jones, Kevin M. – Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2005
Nocturnal enuresis is one of the most prevalent and distressing of all childhood problems. The treatment of nocturnal enuresis has shifted in the past few decades from a strictly psychopathological perspective to a biobehavioral perspective. Although the primary clinical features of this disorder are medical/organic, there is currently strong…
Descriptors: Counseling Techniques, Behavior Modification, Child Behavior, Sleep
Crow, Terry – Learning & Memory, 2004
The less-complex central nervous system of many invertebrates make them attractive for not only the molecular analysis of the associative learning and memory, but also in determining how neural circuits are modified by learning to generate changes in behavior. The nudibranch mollusk "Hermissenda crassicornis" is a preparation that has contributed…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Identification, Classical Conditioning, Anatomy
Kitano, Katsunori; Fukai, Tomoki – Learning & Memory, 2004
When a sensory cue was repeatedly followed by a behavioral event with fixed delays, pairs of premotor and primary motor neurons showed significant increases of coincident spikes at times a monkey was expecting the event. These results provided evidence that neuronal firing synchrony has predictive power. To elucidate the underlying mechanism, here…
Descriptors: Cytology, Scientific Research, Classical Conditioning, Cues
Ohno, Masuo; Tseng, Wilbur; Silva, Alcino J.; Disterhoft, John F. – Learning & Memory, 2005
Little is known about signaling mechanisms underlying temporal associative learning. Here, we show that mice with a targeted point mutation that prevents autophosphorylation of [alpha]CaMKII ([alpha]CaMKII[superscript T286A]) learn trace eyeblink conditioning normally. This forms a sharp contrast to the severely impaired spatial learning in the…
Descriptors: Conditioning, Animals, Associative Learning, Eye Movements

Kehoe, E. James – Psychological Review, 1988
A detailed description of a layered network model is provided, with computer simulations of key associative learning phenomena and predictions generated from the model. The model is compared to more conventional theories of learning to learn and configural learning. (SLD)
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Classical Conditioning, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology

Stoddard, Lawrence T.; McIlvane, William J. – Research in Developmental Disabilities, 1989
Five profoundly mentally retarded adolescents and adults were taught to respond to an auditory-visual complex stimulus. Later, the auditory component alone was presented, and three subjects did not respond. These subjects then received a fading program which successfully established auditory stimulus control with two subjects. (MSE)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Adults, Auditory Stimuli, Conditioning

Lang, Peter J.; And Others – Psychological Review, 1990
Evidence that the vigor of the startle reflex varies systematically with the organism's emotional state is reviewed. A theory elucidating this relationship suggests how amplitude of eyeblink response to a probe may be modulated by affective content of perception and thought. Implications for research on emotion are outlined. (SLD)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Attention, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Processes