learning processes behaviorism classical conditioning operant conditioning

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Learning Processes

• Behaviorism

• Classical conditioning

• Operant conditioning

2

Adaptation to the Environment

• Learning - “any process through which experience at one time can alter an individual’s behavior at a future time” (Gray)

• Hilgard and Bower (1975) add: “provided that the behavior change cannot be explained on the basis of native response tendencies, maturation or temporary states of the subject (e.g. fatigue, drugs, etc)

3

Behaviorism

• The attempt to understand observable activity in terms of observable stimuli and observable responses

• John B. Watson (1913)• B.F. Skinner (1938)

What’s this about

LEARNING?

Classical Conditioning

5

Pavlov’s Dogs

• Digestive reflexes and salivation

• Psychic secretion

Classical Conditioning

UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS REFLEX ACTIONwill

elicit a

UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS

NEUTRAL STIMULUSREFLEX ACTIONwill

elicit a

CONDITIONED STIMULUSCONDITIONED STIMULUSwill

elicit aCONDITIONED

RESPONSE

NEUTRAL STIMULUSwill

elicit NO REACTION

Neutral Stimulus--Bell

• Does not normally elicit a response or reflex action by itself– A bell ringing

– A color

– A furry object

Unconditioned Stimulus--Food

• Always elicits a reflex action: an unconditioned response– Food

– Blast of air

– Noise

9

Unconditioned Response--Salivation

• A response to an unconditioned stimulus--naturally occurring– Salivation at smell of food

– Eye blinks at blast of air

– Startle reaction in babies

10

Conditioned Stimulus--Bell

• The stimulus that was originally neutral becomes conditioned after it has been paired with the unconditioned stimulus

• Will eventually elicit the unconditioned response by itself

11

Conditioned Response

• The original unconditioned response becomes conditioned after it has been elicited by the neutral stimulus

12

Classical Conditioning vs. Association by Contiguity

Stimulus A(The word ball)

Thought of B(Mental image of a ball)

Thought of B(Mental image of a ball)

Learning Experience

After Learning

Neutral stimulus(Bell)

Unconditioned response(Salivation)

Conditioned response(Salivation)

Conditioning Procedure

After Conditioning

Unconditioned stimulus(Food)

Conditioned stimulus(Bell)

Stimulus A(The word ball)

Stimulus B(Sight of a ball)

13

Classical Conditioning Phenomena

• Extinction

• Spontaneous recovery

• Generalization

• Discrimination training

14

John B. Watson and Little Albert

• Conditioned emotional responses

• Generalization

• Extinction

15

Conditioned Drug Reactions

• Opposite the drug effect• How does this explain deaths by

OD in unfamiliar places?

16

Early Operant Conditioning

• E.L. Thorndike (1898)

• Puzzle boxes and catsScratch at bars

Push at ceiling

Dig at floorSituation:stimuliinside ofpuzzle box

Howl

Etc.

Etc.

Press lever

First Trialin Box

Scratch at bars

Push at ceiling

Dig at floorSituation:stimuliinside ofpuzzle box

Howl

Etc.

Etc.

Press lever

After ManyTrials in Box

17

B.F. Skinner’s Operant Conditioning

• Did not like the term “satisfying”

• Invented a better appartus--the Skinner box

Operant Conditioning Terms

• Shaping

• Consequences– positive and negative reinforcement

– positive and negative punishment

Reinforcement Schedules

• Continuous: 1 to 1 ratio, a prize every time

• Ratio– fixed: 1 to ?, a prize every ? time– variable: ? to ?, maybe a prize, maybe not!

• Interval– fixed: announced examination– variable: pop quiz

Classical vs. Operant Conditioning

CLASSICAL• Stimulus precedes

the response and elicits it

• Elicited responses

• Learning as a result of association

• Pavlov

OPERANT• Stimulus follows

the response and strengthens it

• Emitted responses

• Learning as a result of consequences

• Skinner

The Basic Concepts of Learning Theory

• Classical conditioning– elicits response as a result of associating

• unconditioned stimulus• neutral stimulus

• Operant conditioning– emitted response – learning is a result of consequences

• reinforcers• punishment

22

Observational Learning

• Specific skills and general behavioral styles

• Bandura’s cognitive theory

The Ecological Perspective

• Alternative to general-process perspective

• Learning what to eat

24

Alternative Perspective

• Role of environment

• Components of learning

25

Learning What to Eat

• Food-aversion learning

• Food-preference learning

• Food-selection experiment with human infants

• Social learning and food selection

• Summary of rules

26

Food-Aversion Learning

• Classical conditioning or not?

27

Food-Preference Learning

• Experiments with rats and thiamin

28

Food Selection Experiment

• Infants’ ability to choose a nutritionally balanced meal

29

Summary of Rules

• When possible, eat what your elders eat.

• When you eat a new food, remember its taste and smell

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