Term ID: T1525

Equipotentiality Principle

/equipotentiality-principle/
The early behaviorist assumption that all stimulus-response associations are equally learnable, later challenged by research demonstrating biological constraints and preparedness in learning certain associations.
Example: Garcia and Koelling's discovery that rats easily learn taste-illness associations but not taste-shock associations, violating the equipotentiality assumption and revealing biological learning constraints.

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Reference: Garcia & Koelling (1966)