Scared Infants and Sick Rats: Aversive Conditioning (Intro Psych Tutorial #61)

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  • Опубликовано: 30 июл 2024
  • www.psychexamreview.com
    In this video I explain two examples of aversive conditioning; John Watson's “Little Albert” study pairing presentation of a rat with a loud noise, and John Garcia and Robert Koelling's work on learned taste aversions in rats. Taste aversions demonstrate our biological preparedness for some learning, which allows us to learn certain types of associations more easily than others.
    Don’t forget to subscribe to the channel to see future videos! Have questions or topics you’d like to see covered in a future video? Let me know by commenting or sending me an email!
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    “Little Albert” study footage:
    • Baby Albert Experiments
    Enable closed-captioning or find a full transcript of this video here: www.psychexamreview.com/scared...

Комментарии • 23

  • @natdoekje1
    @natdoekje1 4 года назад +6

    my right ear really enjoyed this

  • @littleakuma7979
    @littleakuma7979 6 месяцев назад

    i am here 15 hours before my final exam. i feel like these videos will help me so much so i wanna thank before hand.
    Also the way i paid more attention when Watson and Rayner affair mentioned was so funny to me. I will be telling people about it for sure

    • @PsychExamReview
      @PsychExamReview  6 месяцев назад

      I hope this helps you to remember more than just Watson's affair 😂 best of luck in your studying and your exam!

  • @abdoulazizdabo9064
    @abdoulazizdabo9064 4 года назад +1

    You really know your stuff

  • @ry5172
    @ry5172 3 года назад +2

    Thank you very much!!! Is it very useful and clear, which definitely help me who is having her first week of psy subject ever:))

    • @PsychExamReview
      @PsychExamReview  3 года назад +1

      Glad to hear it was helpful, best of luck and hope you enjoy your studies!

  • @sankhayanbhaumik6452
    @sankhayanbhaumik6452 3 года назад

    Nice explanation.....

  • @gkamakshi4082
    @gkamakshi4082 4 месяца назад

    well explained sir. thoroughly enjoyed your wense of humour too. thank you.

  • @ColoredMud
    @ColoredMud 5 лет назад +5

    When I was a kid I ate a whole bucket of roasted peanuts and I got sick, to this day I wan't go near them. So that is taste aversion, interesting.

    • @nobaso620
      @nobaso620 4 года назад

      Could you use another example in a social context that explains how this behavior is innate

  • @journeytoart
    @journeytoart 3 года назад +1

    So helpful

  • @tejasvisonawane5188
    @tejasvisonawane5188 3 года назад +1

    m actually reading this one night before my viva of final and i think it will help me

  • @pacificclasses4650
    @pacificclasses4650 5 месяцев назад

    Good explanation.
    Thank you

  • @johnnyjohnson3232
    @johnnyjohnson3232 3 года назад +1

    Nice video 🔥🔥🔥
    I think why we associate food with sickness even after so many hours is because we know *digestion takes a lot of time 🤔🤔*

    • @CaptainCupcake
      @CaptainCupcake Год назад

      Could be. I actually thought it mostly has to do with the taste. As a kid I threw up a few hours after eating a carpaccio salad. The taste/smell of the carpaccio and pinenuts during the vomiting was so strong, I still get nauseous smelling it till this day.

  • @user-dy5hd5rs9b
    @user-dy5hd5rs9b 3 года назад

    do you have an e-mail id where we could drop some doubts?

  • @medhashreegoswami13
    @medhashreegoswami13 2 года назад

    Really amazing. But couldn't find the scary santa. Wanna see how creepy it looks.

    • @PsychExamReview
      @PsychExamReview  2 года назад +1

      You can briefly see Watson wearing the mask at the end of the original footage linked in the video description box, enjoy!

  • @faatimafaarah1636
    @faatimafaarah1636 Год назад +1

    My allah guided in right path