Dear Science Teacher:

My son has asked me to write you to explain why his
assignment will not be turned in on time this
morning.

As it was explained to me, the experiment he was to
conduct involved a re-creation of Pavlov's study of
conditioned response, in which dogs hear a bell when
they are served dinner and eventually come to
associate the sound with food to the extent that they
drool whenever they hear a ringing noise. (Frankly, I
had reservations over the idea that my dog would start
slobbering whenever I received a phone call, but
choose not to express my doubts in the name of
scientific progress.)

Here are my own observations of how the experiment
proceeded.

Step One: Son gathers kibbles in a small bag. Dog
expresses immediate interest, racing over to regard
boy with frantic expression. Son scolds dog for
drooling before the experiment is even started.
Sister shrieks that dog slobber is gross. Mother
evicts scientist and dog from kitchen. Son complains
that nobody cares about his science project, but he's
wrong---the dog obviously DOES care, with a passion
bordering on obsessive.

Step Two: The experiment is reassembled in the living
room. In a demonstration of human Pavlovian response,
my son reacts to the proximity of the television by
picking up the remote and surfing channels. The dog
whines, eager to begin work on the project.

Step Three: The son's channel surfing stumbles upon
the movie "Bikini Car Wash III," and I sort of lose
track of what's going on for several minutes.

Step Four: The wife steps right in front of the
television (during, I might add, a particularly tense
scene in which the number of vehicles coming through
the car wash threatens to overwhelm the system,
causing soapy water to spray all over the hapless
ladies who are running the operation) and states that
if all we're going to do is sit around and watch TV,
she has a whole list of chores that need to be done.

Step Five: The TV is turned off. Father and son
privately grumble to each other that if Pavlov had had
his mother around, we never would have learned how to
make dogs drool on command, and the world would be
much worse off.

Step Six: The bell is rung. A treat is dispensed to
the dog. Then the son rings the bell without giving a
treat. Before the father can explain that
conditioning takes longer than a single exposure, the
dog snatches the bag of kibbles.

Step Seven: Son takes off in mad pursuit of dog.
Mother yells from kitchen to stop running in the
house. Father furtively turns on TV to check on
developments at the car wash.

Step Eight: Gradually it occurs to the father that
the dog has something else in its mouth: the father's
shoe. The father yells for the animal to drop it, but
the animal pretends it has forgotten how to speak
English. The son finally tackles the stupid canine,
knocking over a lamp in the process. How did the dog
get my shoe, the father demands. I gave it to her,
the son replies. Why on earth would you do that? the
father inquires. Because I ran out of dog food, the
son explains patiently.

Step Nine: Another baggie of kibble is assembled.
The dog appears delighted at how the afternoon is
going. The bell is rung, the dog is fed. This is
repeated ten times, with the subject of the experiment
becoming increasingly excited. The eleventh time,
with the bag of treats wisely held out of reach, the
bell is rung without a treat.The dog, now in a
frenzy, barks frantically. The wife yells to please
keep that animal quiet. Fearing she might come back
into the living room and see the TV on, the father
urges the scientist to give the canine some food to
shut it up. It gobbles up the treat without
appearing to chew and immediately commences barking
again. More food is dispensed.

Step Ten: The dog has discovered that if it wants a
treat, it need only to bark. This is called
conditioned response.

Pavlov would be proud.
- - - - -

write to the author at [EMAIL PROTECTED] For
reprint permission, including web sites, please write
me at [EMAIL PROTECTED]  This newsletter may be
distributed freely via e-mail but you MUST include the
following subscription and copyright information:

The Cameron Column, A Free Internet Newsletter
Copyright W. Bruce Cameron 2002
http://www.wbrucecameron.com/
Dear Science Teacher  Copyright 2001 W. Bruce Cameron_
=> Please do not be the sort of person who would
remove this copyright, thank you <=
_ _ _ _ _

S. L. Reiley-Lince * [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Dark Star Cavaliers - they'll drive you happy!
http://www.DarkStarFamily.com/Cavaliers.htm

=========================================================
"Magic Commands":
to stop receiving mail for awhile, click here and send the email:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20NOMAIL
to start it up gain click here:
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?body=SET%20CKCS-L%20MAIL

 E-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] for assistance.
Search the Archives... http://apple.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ckcs-l.html

All e-mail sent through CKCS-L is Copyright 2002 by its original author.

Reply via email to