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Operant conditioning

Operant conditioning. Learning from our behavior’s consequences. Operant conditioning. How the consequences of our behavior affects our future behavior Edward Thorndike started this concept by studying cats in “puzzle boxes”

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Operant conditioning

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  1. Operant conditioning Learning from our behavior’s consequences

  2. Operant conditioning • How the consequences of our behavior affects our future behavior • Edward Thorndike started this concept by studying cats in “puzzle boxes” • He graphed how their learning progressed over many trials to reveal the learning curve

  3. reinforcement • An event which increases the future probability of the most recent response • First explored by Thorndike • Taken from another perspective, if the delivery of something makes the action or behavior which preceded it more likely to occur, it is a reinforcer • A reinforcer “stamps in” a response

  4. Thorndike labeled this “The Law of Effect” • We are more likely to repeat responses that lead to (what we view as) favorable consequences or outcomes

  5. In operant conditioning, we change behavior by following a desired action/response with reinforcement • And the sooner, the better • We label it “operant” because the subject operates on the environment to obtain reinforcement

  6. Cc contrast • Some call it instrumental conditioning because the subject’s behavior is instrumental in producing the outcome • Stark distinction from classical conditioning when the subject’s behavior was meaningless • Operant – subject acts with muscles • Classical – subject reacts through internal organs

  7. b. F. skinner • The “Father” of Operant Conditioning • Zealous advocate • Laid out theoretical framework • Used only the simplest of assumptions • Pioneered precise operational definitions • Invented The Skinner Box • Rats pressed levers, pigeons pecked Os

  8. Setting the table for desired behaviors • How do we get the rat to pull the lever in the first place? • Shaping – establishing a new behavior by reinforcing successive approximations to it

  9. Shaping ii • Works with rats, pigeons, children, everyone • Skinner’s lectures • Pigeon’s dropping bombs? • “Catch them while they’re being good” • Token economies

  10. Complex behaviors • How do we get an animal to perform a sequence of behaviors? • Chaining – reinforce each desired behavior by giving the animal the chance to engage in a previously reinforced behavior

  11. Reinforcement & punishment • These two events drive operant conditioning, and as a result, much of our behavior • Reinforcement increases the odds that the behavior which preceded it will re-occur • Punishment decreases the odds that the behavior which preceded it will reoccur

  12. Reinforcement can result from removing pain or by helping us avoid it • Going to the dentist • Taking Tylenol/aspirin • Finding an excuse not to ask her out • Settling the big trial

  13. SUPERSTITIONS • We think that our good luck charm prevents us from screwing up • Same with “pre-game” rituals

  14. More punishment • Punishment can result from removing pleasure • “If you do that one more time. I’ll …” • Fouls in a basketball game • Grounded! • Time-outs

  15. Does reinforcement simply equal pleasure or pain equal punishment? • No, reinforcement must increase thefrequency of the behavior. • And, punishment must decrease it.

  16. Punishment iii • Very hard to administer successfully • Works best if it is: 1) consistent, 2) immediate, 3) moderate, and 4) alternatives are available. Does torture work? Spanking?

  17. Finding the right reinforcer • How can we pick reinforcers that will prompt more desirable behaviors? • Harder than you might think, great variability between individuals. • Remember, Skinner virtually starved his pigeons and rats.

  18. Two principles • Permack – the chance to engage in frequent behaviors can be a reinforcer for less common behaviors • If that fails,

  19. Disequilibrium – disrupting someone’s typical routine will make a return to the routine reinforcing

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