Chapter

Understanding Conditioned Place Aversion & Preference
This podcast episode discusses conditioned place aversion, where animals avoid a location where they previously experienced a negative stimulus, and conditioned place preference, where animals are drawn to a location where they previously received a reward or positive stimulus. The episode also explores techniques for accelerating repetition-based learning to improve the learning curve.
Clips
This podcast discusses a process for accelerating repetition-based learning to establish stronger connections between the neurons involved in generating memory or behavior more quickly, and how this process offers solutions for those who lack patience or time.
36:33 - 39:02 (02:28)
Summary
This podcast discusses a process for accelerating repetition-based learning to establish stronger connections between the neurons involved in generating memory or behavior more quickly, and how this process offers solutions for those who lack patience or time.
ChapterUnderstanding Conditioned Place Aversion & Preference
EpisodeUnderstand & Improve Memory Using Science-Based Tools
PodcastHuberman Lab
Subjects who read emotionally intense language are more likely to remember and accurately recall information, while experiments with animals show conditioned place aversion.
39:03 - 42:44 (03:40)
Summary
Subjects who read emotionally intense language are more likely to remember and accurately recall information, while experiments with animals show conditioned place aversion.
ChapterUnderstanding Conditioned Place Aversion & Preference
EpisodeUnderstand & Improve Memory Using Science-Based Tools
PodcastHuberman Lab
Condition place preference is a phenomenon in which animals associate certain locations with rewards and tend to return to those locations even when no rewards are present.
42:44 - 45:42 (02:58)
Summary
Condition place preference is a phenomenon in which animals associate certain locations with rewards and tend to return to those locations even when no rewards are present. This phenomenon involves epinephrine and one-trial learning.