Stereotype of Conditioned Reflexes

Stereotypes of conditioned reflexes are special systems of movements and reactions to stimuli of the surrounding world, which are formed in the process of learning and interaction of the organism with the environment through a combination of conditioned and unconditioned reflexes. Without stereotypes of conditioned reflexes, human activity is impossible. They provide regulation of human behavior in conditions of more conscious and unconscious influences exerted on him by the environment.

According to G.S. Stein, P.D. Shabanova, V.N. Ilyin, stereotypes of conditioned reflexes can be biological, physiological and psychological. The first example of this kind of experiment was the work of D.A. Pavlov. "The doctrine of taste conditioned reflexes." In 1932, he studied salivary reflexes at the sight and smell of meat. The success was facilitated by the fact that the content of this secretion is weakly dependent on reflex conditions - it is directly dependent on the taste of the product

Based on the above, it follows that stereotypes of conditioned reflex systems are the path to the formation of ordered and mandatory emotional actions in a person’s life. That is, conditioned reflexes create the basis for controlling behavior in various situations and help adapt to the environment. In this regard, stereotypes of reflex activity are the basis for the formation of functions and states of all subsequent mental processes.