Cotcha Yankinov
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Jul 21, 2015
- Messages
- 2,952
Say that a patient repeatedly detoxes at a center that has patients wear identification wristbands.
When going through repeated withdrawals while wearing the wristband, couldn't the patient develop something of a "conditioned stimulus avoidance" for the wristband, by virtue of both the visual and tactile senses?
I'm also curious if "conditioned stimulus preference/avoidance" has been applied to audio at all.
Take for example exposing an animal to a 440 Hz tone while they are being reinforced, and then a different tone while they are withdrawing.
My final pondering is whether or not CPA may apply to the basal human sensory experience - for example, the feeling of looking out from eyeballs located in the head, with a particular field of vision and spectrum of colors.
The "place", in conditioned place avoidance, would be the human body itself (the addicts have always had the experience of human vision and so forth whenever they withdraw).
When going through repeated withdrawals while wearing the wristband, couldn't the patient develop something of a "conditioned stimulus avoidance" for the wristband, by virtue of both the visual and tactile senses?
I'm also curious if "conditioned stimulus preference/avoidance" has been applied to audio at all.
Take for example exposing an animal to a 440 Hz tone while they are being reinforced, and then a different tone while they are withdrawing.
My final pondering is whether or not CPA may apply to the basal human sensory experience - for example, the feeling of looking out from eyeballs located in the head, with a particular field of vision and spectrum of colors.
The "place", in conditioned place avoidance, would be the human body itself (the addicts have always had the experience of human vision and so forth whenever they withdraw).