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conditioning
[kuhn-dish-uh-ning]
noun
Also called operant conditioning, instrumental conditioning. a process of changing behavior by rewarding or punishing a subject each time an action is performed until the subject associates the action with pleasure or distress.
Also called classical conditioning, Pavlovian conditioning, respondent conditioning. a process in which a stimulus that was previously neutral, as the sound of a bell, comes to evoke a particular response, as salivation, by being repeatedly paired with another stimulus that normally evokes the response, as the taste of food.
conditioning
Other Word Forms
- self-conditioning adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of conditioning1
Example Sentences
And poorer people are more likely to live in aging buildings without duct systems or air conditioning units.
After the Canoga Park outing, about two dozen volunteers sat around a table in a Starbucks, resting in the air conditioning.
Those without air conditioning should take cool showers or baths, use their stoves and ovens less and visit a place that does have air conditioning, such as a library or mall.
A summer of soaring temperatures has come to an end with more Britons turning to air conditioning to cope with the heat - but should you buy one too?
With air conditioning blasting all night, detainees have told her the floor is cold and they have gotten sick.
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