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Definition of Conditioned emotional response
1. Noun. An emotional response that has been acquired by conditioning.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Conditioned Emotional Response
Literary usage of Conditioned emotional response
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Taboo and Genetics: A Study of the Biological, Sociological and by Melvin Moses Knight (1920)
"... characteristic is termed fetishism, and the stimulus which becomes capable of
arousing the conditioned emotional response is called an erotic fetish. ..."
2. Stress, Gender, and Alcohol-Seeking Behavior edited by Walter A. Hunt, Sam Zakhari (1996)
"1989) using a conditioned emotional response paradigm after initiation of alcohol
self-administration in an operant situation with the sucrose-substitution ..."
3. Mammalian Models for Research on Aging by Bennett J. Cohen, Institute Of Laboratory Animal Resources, National Research Council Staff (1981)
"Interaction of age and shock intensity on acquisition of a discriminated conditioned
emotional response. J. Comp. Physiol. Psychol. 68:364-369. ..."
4. Relative Connections by Gyeorgos Ceres Hatonn (1993)
"... negative attribution: Feeling, followed close in time with information input,
will color a thought, and become a conditioned emotional response (CER) if ..."