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Learning. Overview. What is Learning? Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning Limits of Behaviorism Observational Learning. What is Learning?. Relatively permanent changes in behavior that result from experience How does learning happen? How can we control it?.
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Overview • What is Learning? • Classical Conditioning • Operant Conditioning • Limits of Behaviorism • Observational Learning
What is Learning? • Relatively permanent changes in behavior that result from experience • How does learning happen? • How can we control it?
Classical Conditioning • Associate two events in the world • A behavior that is already part of the animal’s normal behavioral repertoire can be linked to other stimuli
Classical Conditioning Terms • Unconditional Stimulus (UCS): event that normally causes a behavior without any learning • Unconditional Response (UCR): behavior that results from the UCS without any learning
Classical Conditioning Terms • Conditional Stimulus (CS): originally neutral stimulus that causes a response after being associated with the UCS • Conditional Response (CR): behavior that results from the CS after learning
More on Classical Conditioning • Extinction: the CR will disappear if the CS is repeatedly presented alone • Spontaneous Recovery: the CR may reappear without further conditioning after extinction has occurred
Operant Conditioning • Law of Effect: associate behavior with its consequences • repeat what you did before something good happened • avoid what you did before something bad happened
Shaping • Successive approximations to the desired behavior • Allows new behaviors to be learned
Types of Consequences • Reinforcement increases a behavior • Punishment decreases a behavior
Remove Something Add Something positive reinforcement negative reinforcement Increase Behavior Decrease Behavior positive punishment negative punishment
Limits of Behaviorist Principles • Latent Learning • Tolman: cognitive maps • Observational Learning • Bandura: Bobo study • Mirror neurons