Conditioned reflexes and behavior.

Date:
[1930]
  • Film

About this work

Description

This black and white, silent film, attempts to show the difference between conditioned and unconditioned responses in animals and humans. It begins by enacting Pavlov's experiments on a dog's salivary mechanism. Gradually we are shown how the unconditioned production of saliva at the sight or smell of food can be conditioned to appear at the sight of a flashing light. We also examine a newborn baby's reflexes of sucking and grabbing and see how they become conditioned as it grows older. Simple animated diagrams attempt to explain changes in the brain as a subject becomes conditioned. Professor Krasnagorski enacts a salivary test on a young boy in his laboratory. Attention is paid to the difference between instinctive behaviour in animals and learned behaviour. This is illustrated by images of animals in the wild and those in zoos. We see trained seals performing tricks for rewards and Prof. Gladishikov demonstrating 'the pain method of training' on lions and bears.

Publication/Creation

[Place of publication not identified], [1930]

Physical description

2 film reels (48 min.) : color, 16 mm

Copyright note

Copyright previously held by British Medical Association and assigned to Wellcome in 2005

Notes

This is originally a Russian film but the Russian intertitles have been replaced with English ones, although the captions in the medical animations are still in Russian.

Creator/production credits

Produced by Prof. L.N. Voskresenki and Prof. D.S. Fursikov

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

  • Copy 1

    LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores
    BMA967
    By appointmentManual request
  • Copy 2

    Location Access
    Closed stores
    BMA967
    Can't be requested

    Note

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