NON-ASSOCIATIVE LEARNING
Laboratory studies of learning have concentrated on conditioning procedures in which the participants experience two events (two stimuli, or a response and a stimulus) in close contiguity. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that association between events has proved so dominant in theories of learning. This approach has been justified by the assumption that the complex instances of learning shown in our everyday behaviour may well be governed by associative principles. But this should not blind us to the fact that learning can also result from procedures in which there is no intentional pairing of two events.
Laboratory studies of learning have concentrated on conditioning procedures in which the participants experience two events (two stimuli, or a response and a stimulus) in close contiguity. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that association between events has proved so dominant in theories of learning. This approach has been justified by the assumption that the complex instances of learning shown in our everyday behaviour may well be governed by associative principles. But this should not blind us to the fact that learning can also result from procedures in which there is no intentional pairing of two events.
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