Answer:. The nausea from the lobby is a conditioned response
Explanation:
exhibited behaviour that does not naturally occur but is usually learned by a person by pairing a potent stimulus with neutral stimulus.
A potent stimulus is that which requires no conditioning nor learning in order to appropriately respond to.
Neutral stimuli are not originally association with any response but proper responses has to be learned through continuous pairings with potent stimulus.
A researcher once carried out a study on digestion. In order to test dogs' different salivation responses to various foods, he designed a device that was able to measure the quantity of saliva that dogs produce or excrete.
On a particular instance, the researcher discovered through the device that he designed that the dogs had already begun salivating even without food being brought before them. Further study revealed to him that the dogs unintentionally salivated when his research assistants entered the place they were kept.
The researcher then came to the conclusion that the dogs started associating food with the appearance or arrival of his research assistants by pairing the two events.
After a series of repetitions, the dogs were conditioned to anticipate the arrival of food (potent stimulus) the moment, the research assistant (formerly neutral stimulus) arrived.
With the information above, we can conclude that the nausea from the lobby that still affects Kaylin three months after delivering her child is a case of conditioned response