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1993 3RD PLACE SPRINGERLE
Servings: 84 servings

1/2 tsp baker's ammonia
2 tbl milk
6 eggs, at room temperature
1 1/2 lb confectioners' sugar
(about 6 cups)
1/2 cup unsalted butter, softened
1/2 tsp anise oil
1/2 tsp salt
2 lb cake flour, sifted
(about 8 cups)

Directions: preparation time: 40 minutes standing time: 1 hour plus overnight cooking time: 10 to 12 minutes aging time: 1 week or more 1. mash baker's ammonia with a rolling pin if it is not powdered. dissolve it in the milk in a small bowl and let stand 1 hour before using. 2. beat eggs in large bowl of electric mixer until thick and lemon-colored, about 5 minutes. gradually beat in confectioners' sugar until creamy and smooth. add butter and beat again until creamy. add anise oil, dissolved baker's ammonia and salt; beat to mix. gradually beat in enough flour to make a stiff dough. 3. cut off pieces of dough and work in more flour on a floured work surface until dough is stiff enough to roll out and hold the design of the springerle rolling pin or mold. roll out on a lightly floured board with a floured rolling pin to 1/4-inch thickness. press design on dough with a floured springerle rolling pin or mold. cut cookies apart using a floured knife. leave on work surface covered with a clean kitchen towel overnight. 4. the next day, heat oven to 325 degrees. bake cookies on greased baking sheets, until barely golden on the bottom, 10 to 12 minutes. cool on wire racks. store in tightly covered tins and allow to mellow at least 1 week before serving. note: this recipe also can be made using 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder (in place of the milk and the baker's ammonia) and anise extract instead of anise oil. however, the cookies will not be as delicately textured and the anise flavor not quite as rich. if using baking powder, add it with the salt to the batter. connie meisinger of buffalo grove tied for third place with this recipe. from the chicago tribune sixth annual food guide holiday cookie contest december 2, 1993 posted to mm-recipes digest v3 #339 from: linda place date: wed, 11 dec 1996 04:11:40 +0000
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Classical conditioning and operant conditioning are different learning methods. The two methods have the word conditioning in common. What is conditioning? Conditioning is the acquisition of specific patterns of behavior in the presence of well-defined stimuli. Both classical and operant conditioning are basic forms of learning. Classical conditioning is a type of learning in which an organism learns to transfer a natural response from one stimulus to another, previously neutral stimulus. Manipulating reflexes does this. Operant conditioning is a type of learning in which the likelihood of a behavior is increased or decreased by the use of reinforcement or punishment. Operant conditioning deals with more cognitive thought process.
These two forms of learning have similarities and differences. Their similarities are that they both produce basic phenomena. One such phenomenon is acquisition. Both types of conditioning result in the inheritance of a behavior.
One of the most famous of experiments that illustrates classical conditioning is Pavlov's Dogs. In this experiment, Pavlov sat behind a one-way mirror and controlled the presentation of a bell. The bell was the conditioned stimulus. A conditioned stimulus was an originally neutral stimulus that could eventually produce a desired response when presented alone. Directly after the ringing of the bell, Pavlov gave the dog food. The food was the unconditioned stimulus. This means that the food caused an uncontrollable response whenever it was presented alone. That response would be the salivation of the dog. A tube that was in the dog's mouth then measured the saliva. When the unconditioned stimulus (US) was paired with a conditioned stimulus (CS), it eventually resulted in a conditioned response. Extinction results if there is a decrease in frequency or strength of a learned response due to the failure to continue to pair the US and the CS.
Extinction can also occur in operant conditioning. The key to operant conditioning is reinforcement. Reinforcement is when a stimulus is presented that increases the probability that the preceding response will recur in the future. If reinforcement is withheld, extinction will occur in operant conditioning. Another factor that is involved in conditioning is spontaneous recovery. That is the reappearance of an extinguished response after the passage of time, without further training. If Pavlov's dogs did not hear the bell for a few years, and if when they heard it later they drooled, it would be an example of spontaneous recovery.
Something similar occurs with operant conditioning. If an animal was conditioned to behave in a certain manor, but then their reinforcement was stopped, that animal may still have a reaction to the stimulus at a much later date. Organisms that are being conditioned through operant or classical conditioning can go through something that is known as stimulus generalization. This is when there is a transfer of a learned response to different but similar stimuli. An example would be if one of Pavlov's dogs salivated to the sound of a bell that was different from the one that they were originally conditioned with. Stimulus discrimination is another phenomena that occurs with classical and operant conditioning. Discrimination is when an organism learns to respond to only one stimulus and inhibit the response to all other stimuli. It is the reverse of generalization. If an organism hears many different sounds, but is only given reinforcement for responding to only one of the sounds, it learns to discriminate between the sounds.
Some of the differences between operant and classical conditioning lie in the extent to which reinforcement depends on the behavior of the learner. In classical conditioning, the learner is automatically reinforced. That is how it learns to respond to a once neutral stimulus. In operant conditioning, the learner must provide a correct response in order to received the reinforcement. Another difference between the two forms of conditioning is the type of behavior to which each method applies. Classical conditioning applies to a behavior that is always wanted. It was Pavlov's purpose to have the dogs salivate on command. In operant conditioning, a behavior can be learned or extinguished. If you wanted to train a dog not to do something, you would use a form of punishment.
Classical and operant conditioning are similar, but they do differ in a few ways. Both are fairly reliable ways to teach an organism to act in a specific manor.






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