Distinguish between classical and operant conditioning.
What will be an ideal response?
In classical conditioning, an unconditioned stimulus (one that automatically produces a specific response-the unconditioned response-when no learning occurs) is temporarily paired with a previously neutral conditioned stimulus to produce a conditioned response (the unconditioned response, except it is now elicited solely by the conditioned stimulus). In operant conditioning, consequences are applied after a response occurs in order to increase or decrease the probability of that response's occurrence.
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You work in a data analyst unit for a large fast food restaurant chain, planning a customer survey and a colleague informs you that a 95% confidence interval has a 95% probability of containing a population parameter. Because of this, she insists that a survey distributed at one restaurant will provide significant results. Do you agree with her?
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The key ingredient for any curriculum is always the learner
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