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| Essentials of Understanding Psychology: Learning Chapter 5 defines learning as a relatively permanent change in behavior brought about by experience. To understand what learning is you must distinguish between performance changes due to maturation and changes brought about by experience. Similarly you must distinguish short-term changes in behavior due to factors other than learning, such as declines in performance resulting from fatigue or lack of effort, from performance changes due to actual learning. Some psychologists have approached learning by considering learning as simply any change in behavior. This chapter first examines the type of learning that explains responses ranging from a dog salivating when it hears the can opener to the emotions we feel when our national anthem is played. Then theories that consider how learning is a consequence of rewarding circumstances are examined. Finally, approaches that focus on the cognitive aspects of learning are reviewed.
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