The big idea: Classical conditioning is learning by linking. Two things keep happening together, until one of them on its own makes you react. You do not choose to learn it — it just happens through experience.
Think about a stimulus you meet every day. On its own it may mean nothing. But if it keeps arriving with something that makes you react, your brain quietly ties the two together.
Soon the first thing alone is enough to trigger the reaction. That reaction is a reflex — like your mouth watering when food is near.
The three stages of the learning
Before learning
Food already makes your mouth water. That link is natural. The microwave beep means nothing yet.
During learning
The beep sounds and the food arrives, over and over. Your brain starts to tie the two together.
After learning
Now the beep alone makes your mouth water. A neutral sound has become a learned trigger.
Before → During → After
Memory hook: Pair it, then it triggers.
A neutral cue + a natural trigger, repeated many times, turns the cue into a trigger of its own.
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Learn the five parts: Every example of classical conditioning uses the same five parts. Learn these five and you can explain any example — real or made up.
Neutral stimulus (NS)
A cue that causes no special reaction at first. Example: the microwave beep before you link it to anything.
Unconditioned stimulus (UCS)
Something that triggers a reflex all on its own, with no learning needed. Example: warm, tasty food.
Unconditioned response (UCR)
The natural reflex to the UCS. Example: your mouth watering when the food arrives.
Conditioned stimulus (CS)
The once-neutral cue after learning. It now triggers the response by itself. Example: the beep, now meaningful.
Conditioned response (CR)
The learned reaction to the CS. Example: your mouth watering at the beep, before any food is there.
Let us walk through one clear example. Maya lives in a busy home. Every day a microwave beep (NS) is followed by a warm snack (UCS), and the snack makes her mouth water (UCR).
This happens again and again. This repeated pairing is called acquisition. Maya's brain learns that the beep means food is coming.
After enough pairings, the beep alone makes Maya's mouth water. The beep is now a conditioned stimulus (CS), and the watering is a conditioned response (CR). She has learned a link without ever trying to.
Imagine you are there: Maya is doing homework in another room. The microwave beeps. Nobody has said a word about food, yet her mouth is already watering and she feels hungry. The sound alone has become a signal. That is a conditioned response in real life.
Learned links can also fade or spread. Three ideas are worth knowing:
- Extinction — if the beep keeps sounding with no food, the mouth-watering slowly stops.
- Spontaneous recovery — after a break, the beep may trigger a little watering again.
- Stimulus generalization — a similar beep, like an oven timer, might trigger the same response.
Exam tip: Examiners love it when you name the five parts correctly and match them to your example. Always say which thing is the NS, UCS, UCR, CS and CR.
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The concept behind it: Classical conditioning shows that behaviour can change through experience — this is the concept of change. In the learning and cognition context, it explains how we pick up likes, fears and habits without meaning to.
The first person to study this carefully was Ivan Pavlov, working with dogs. He noticed that his dogs began to drool at a signal that came just before their food, not only at the food itself. Pairing the signal with food had taught the dogs to treat the signal as if it were food. We use his idea, not his exact notes.
Studies are just examples: You do not need to memorise a famous study. To explain classical conditioning you may use a real study (like Pavlov's dogs) or a made-up example (like Maya's microwave). Both score full marks as long as the mechanism is clear.
Strengths of the explanation
- It is simple and clear, with five parts you can test
- It can be studied in controlled experiments, so it shows causality
- It explains many real behaviours, from fears to food likes
- It works across humans and animals, so it is widely useful
Limits of the explanation
- It ignores thinking — it treats the learner as passive
- It does not explain new or creative behaviour
- Not everything is learned this easily; some links form far faster than others
- People can know a cue is harmless and still react, which is hard to explain
Even with these limits, the idea is powerful because it appears everywhere. Here are some everyday examples:
- Fears and phobias — a scary event paired with a harmless object can make that object feel frightening.
- Adverts — brands pair products with happy music and smiling people, hoping you feel good about the product.
- Food dislikes — one bad stomach after a meal can make you avoid that food for years.
How to reach the top marks: The best answers do not just describe conditioning — they evaluate it. Weigh a strength against a limit, then reach a short, clear judgement about how useful the explanation is.
How Paper 1 tests this: In the 2027 IB syllabus, classical conditioning appears under cognitive-approach content. On Paper 1 this term is tested in two ways:
• A short-answer question [4 marks] — describe or explain it with one example.
• An applied question [6 marks] — use it to explain a situation in a given context.
The big [15] essays are concept-framed and come in the four contexts. This term can support one — for example, the concept of change in the learning and cognition context.
A student feels anxious every time they hear the bell that signals the start of an exam. Explain how classical conditioning could account for this reaction.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Common mistakes: 1. Mixing up the parts. The CS is the once-neutral cue; the CR is the learned reaction. Do not swap them.
2. Describing, not applying. In the applied [6], map the five parts onto the given scenario — do not just tell the general story.
3. No example. Always ground the mechanism in one clear example.
4. Forgetting the concept. Link back to change and the context you are given.