classical conditioning
Classical conditioning is a process where organisms learn to associate different events or stimuli that frequently occur together. This learning process is common in daily life. For instance, if you observe lightning and subsequently hear thunder, you may start to associate the two and react to the lightning alone, anticipating the thunder.
Classical conditioning is learning in which the stimulus or experience occurs before the behavior and then gets paired or associated with the behavior. It typically happens without our intentional effort—it deals with automatic, involuntary responses rather than behaviors that are voluntarily chosen.

Pavlov’s Story
Does the name Ivan Pavlov ring a bell? Even if you are new to the study of psychology, chances are that you have heard of Pavlov and his famous dogs. Pavlov (1849–1936), a Russian scientist, performed extensive research on dogs and is best known for his experiments in classical conditioning (Figure 1). Pavlov came to his conclusions about how learning occurs completely by accident. Pavlov was a physiologist, not a psychologist. Physiologists study the life processes of organisms, from the molecular level to the level of cells, organ systems, and entire organisms. Pavlov’s area of interest was the digestive system (Hunt, 2007). In his studies with dogs, Pavlov measured the amount of saliva produced in response to various foods. Over time, Pavlov (1927) observed that the dogs began to salivate not only at the taste of food, but also at the sight of food, at the sight of an empty food bowl, and even at the sound of the laboratory assistants’ footsteps. Salivating to food in the mouth is reflexive, so no learning is involved. However, dogs don’t naturally salivate at the sight of an empty bowl or the sound of footsteps.
These unusual responses intrigued Pavlov, and he wondered what accounted for what he called the dogs’ “psychic secretions” (Pavlov, 1927). To explore this phenomenon in an objective manner, Pavlov designed a series of carefully controlled experiments to see which stimuli would cause the dogs to salivate. He was able to train the dogs to salivate in response to stimuli that clearly had nothing to do with food, such as the sound of a bell, a light, and a touch on the leg. Through his experiments, Pavlov realized that an organism has two types of responses to its environment: (1) unconditioned (unlearned) responses, or reflexes, and (2) conditioned (learned) responses.
In Pavlov’s experiments, the dogs salivated each time meat powder was presented to them. The meat powder in this situation was an unconditioned stimulus (UCS): a stimulus that elicits a reflexive response. The dogs’ salivation was an unconditioned response (UCR): a natural (unlearned) reaction to a given stimulus. Before conditioning, think of the dogs’ stimulus and response like this:
In classical conditioning, a neutral stimulus is presented immediately before an unconditioned stimulus. Pavlov would sound a tone (like ringing a bell) and then give the dogs the meat powder (Figure 2). The tone was the neutral stimulus (NS), which is a stimulus that does not naturally elicit a response. Prior to conditioning, the dogs did not salivate when they just heard the tone because the tone had no association for the dogs. Before learning, this means:
Tone (NS) → No reaction
But, during the learning phase, the tone (NS) is presented immediately before the meat powder (UCS). Because the meat power (UCS) was present, the dogs reflexively responded. Quite simply this pairing means:
When Pavlov paired the tone with the meat powder over and over again, the previously neutral stimulus (the tone) began to hold meaning – the meat powder was about to be presented! Therefore, the tone (original text) also began to elicit salivation from the dogs. Thus, the neutral stimulus became the conditioned stimulus (CS), which is a stimulus that elicits a response after repeatedly being paired with an unconditioned stimulus. Eventually, the dogs began to salivate to the tone alone. The behavior caused by the conditioned stimulus is called the conditioned response (CR). In the case of Pavlov’s dogs, they had learned to associate the tone (CS) with being fed, and they began to salivate (CR) in anticipation of food.

- neutral stimulus (NS): stimulus that does not initially elicit a response (the bell)
- unconditioned stimulus (UCS): stimulus that elicits a reflexive response (food)
- unconditioned response (UCR): natural (unlearned) response caused by the unconditioned stimulus (salivation)
- conditioned stimulus (CS): stimulus that elicits a response due to its being paired with an unconditioned stimulus (the bell)[1]
- conditioned response (CR): response caused by the conditioned stimulus (salivation)
- Hint: the neutral stimulus always becomes the conditioned stimulus. ↵