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Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
(1849-1936)
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Who was Ivan Pavlov? |
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The Russian scientist Ivan
Petrovich Pavlov was born in 1849 in Ryazan, where
his father worked as a village priest. In 1870 Ivan
Pavlov abandoned the religious career for which he
had been preparing, and instead went into science.
There he had a great impact on the field of
physiology by studying the mechanisms underlying the
digestive system in mammals.
For his original work in this
field of research, Pavlov was awarded the Nobel Prize
in Physiology or Medicine in 1904. By then he had
turned to studying the laws on the formation of
conditioned reflexes, a topic on which he worked
until his death in 1936. His discoveries in this
field paved the way for an objective science of
behavior.
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Pavlov's drooling dogs |
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While Ivan Pavlov worked to
unveil the secrets of the digestive system, he also
studied what signals triggered related phenomena,
such as the secretion of saliva. When a dog
encounters food, saliva starts to pour from the
salivary glands located in the back of its oral
cavity. This saliva is needed in order to make the
food easier to swallow. The fluid also contains
enzymes that break down certain compounds in the
food. In humans, for example, saliva contains the
enzyme amylase, an effective processor of starch.
Pavlov became interested in
studying reflexes when he saw that the dogs drooled
without the proper stimulus. Although no food was in
sight, their saliva still dribbled. It turned out
that the dogs were reacting to lab coats. Every time
the dogs were served food, the person who served the
food was wearing a lab coat. Therefore, the dogs
reacted as if food was on its way whenever they saw a
lab coat.
In a series of experiments,
Pavlov then tried to figure out how these phenomena
were linked. For example, he struck a bell when the
dogs were fed. If the bell was sounded in close
association with their meal, the dogs learnt to
associate the sound of the bell with food. After a
while, at the mere sound of the bell, they responded
by drooling.
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Different kinds of
reflexes |
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Reflexes make us react in a
certain way. When a light beam hits our eyes, our
pupils shrink in response to the light stimulus. And
when the doctor taps you below the knee cap, your leg
swings out. These reflexes are called unconditioned,
or built-in. The body responds in the same fashion
every time the stimuli (the light or the tap) is
applied. In the same way, dogs drool when they
encounter food.
Pavlov's discovery was that
environmental events that previously had no relation
to a given reflex (such as a bell sound) could,
through experience, trigger a reflex (salivation).
This kind of learnt response is called conditioned
reflex, and the process whereby dogs or humans learn
to connect a stimulus to a reflex is called
conditioning.
Animals generally learn to
associate stimuli that are relevant to their
survival. Food aversion is an example of a natural
conditioned reflex. If an animal eats something with
a distinctive vanilla taste and then eats a tasteless
poison that leads to nausea, the animal will not be
particularly eager to eat vanilla-flavoured food the
next time. Linking nausea to taste is an
evolutionarily successful strategy, since animals
that failed to learn their lesson did not last very
long.
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Why were Pavlov's findings given so much
acknowledgment? |
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Pavlov's description on how
animals (and humans) can be trained to respond in a
certain way to a particular stimulus drew tremendous
interest from the time he first presented his
results. His work paved the way for a new, more
objective method of studying behavior.
So-called Pavlovian training
has been used in many fields, with anti-phobia
treatment as but one example. An important principle
in conditioned learning is that an established
conditioned response (salivating in the case of the
dogs) decreases in intensity if the conditioned
stimulus (bell) is repeatedly presented without the
unconditioned stimulus (food). This process is called
extinction.
In order to treat phobias
evoked by certain environmental situations, such as
heights or crowds, this phenomenon can be used. The
patient is first taught a muscle relaxation
technique. Then he or she is told , over a period of
days, to imagine the fear-producing situation while
trying to inhibit the anxiety by relaxation. At the
end of the series, the strongest anxiety-provoking
situation may be brought to mind without anxiety.
This process is called systematic
desensitization.
Conditioning forms the basis of
much of learned human behavior. Nowadays, this
knowledge has also been exploited by commercial
advertising. An effective commercial should be able
to manipulate the response to a stimulus (like seeing
a product's name) which initially does not provoke
any feeling. The objective is to train people to make
the "false" connection between positive emotions
(e.g. happiness or feeling attractive) and the
particular brand of consumer goods being
advertised.
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Pavlov's prize |
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Although the first image that
comes to mind while mentioning Ivan Pavlov's name is
his drooling dogs, he became a Nobel Laureate for his
research in a different field. In 1904 he received
the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his
pioneering studies of how the digestive system
works.
Until Pavlov started to
scrutinize this field, our knowledge of how food was
digested in the stomach, and what mechanisms were
responsible for regulating this, were quite
foggy.
In order to understand the
process, Pavlov developed a new way of monitoring
what was happening. He surgically made fistulas in
animals' stomachs, which enabled him to study the
organs and take samples of body fluids from them
while they continued to function normally.
More
about Nobel Laureate Ivan Pavlov»
Play the Pavlov's Dog
game »
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By Lotta Fredholm, Science Journalist
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