U01.13.001 Classical conditioning

Learning Objectives

Master the principles of Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning. Understand the relationship between unconditioned and conditioned stimuli, identify the types of responses elicited, and recognize the high-yield clinical applications and behavioral associations for the USMLE Step 1.


1. The Components of Classical Conditioning

Classical conditioning is a form of associative learning where a neutral stimulus gains the power to elicit a response after being paired with a stimulus that naturally triggers that response.

Term Definition Example (Pavlov)
Unconditioned Stimulus (US) A stimulus that naturally triggers a response. Food
Unconditioned Response (UR) The natural, involuntary reaction to the US. Salivation (natural)
Conditioned Stimulus (CS) A previously neutral stimulus that now triggers a response. Bell (learned)
Conditioned Response (CR) The learned response to the CS. Salivation (learned)

 


2. Response Nature: Involuntary vs. Voluntary

A key distinction for board exams is the type of biological response involved. Classical conditioning typically deals with involuntary, autonomic responses.

Feature Classical Conditioning
Response Type Involuntary (Autonomic)
Mechanism Pairing of two stimuli (CS + US).
Examples Nausea, Salivation, Fear/Anxiety, Arousal.

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3. Clinical High-Yield Applications

In medical practice, classical conditioning explains several phenomena that patients experience during treatment.

Clinical Scenario Classical Conditioning Breakdown
Anticipatory Vomiting A chemotherapy patient feels nauseous just by seeing the hospital building (CS) because it was previously paired with chemotherapy drugs (US).
White Coat Hypertension Blood pressure rises in response to a doctor’s white coat (CS) due to past stressful/painful medical experiences (US).
Bell and Pad Method Used for enuresis; the feeling of a full bladder (CS) is paired with an alarm (US) to wake the child.

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High-Yield Mnemonics & Tips:

  • Classical = “C”onnection: It’s a connection between two external stimuli (the Bell and the Food).
  • Involuntary vs. Operant: If the patient is “doing” something to get a reward, it’s Operant. If the patient is “feeling” something automatically, it’s Classical.
  • Extinction: If you keep ringing the bell (CS) without giving the food (US), the dog will eventually stop salivating. This is called Extinction.

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