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Assumptions of Behaviorism. Every behavior has causes that can be understood by scientific methodsMental explanations lead to circular reasoningPower of the environment to mold behavior. John B. Watson.
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1. Learning and Behaviorism Three major areas of learning
Classical Conditioning: Pavlov
Instrumental /Operant Conditioning: Skinner
Social Learning Theory: Bandura
3. John B. Watson “Give me a dozen healthy infants, well-formed, and my own special world to bring them up in, and I’ll guarantee to take any one at random and train him to become any type of specialist I might select – doctor, lawyer, merchant-chief, and yes, beggar man or thief, regardless of his talents, penchants, tendencies, abilities, vocations, and race of his ancestors.”
4. Pavlov and Classical Conditioning The process by which an organism learns a new association between two paired stimuli – a neutral one and one that already causes a reflexive response.
Unconditioned Stimulus
Unconditioned Response
Conditioned Stimulus
Conditioned Response
5. Related Terms Acquisition
Extinction: the dying out of a conditioned response
Spontaneous Recovery: return of a conditioned response after it has been extinguished
6. More Terms! Stimulus Generalization: the extension of a conditioned response from the training stimulus to a similar stimulus
Stimulus Discrimination: learning to respond differently to two stimuli because different outcomes follow them
7. Conditioned Taste Aversion Link a food with illness
CS paired with UR
Preparedness
Concern for patients receiving chemotherapy
8. Operant Conditioning Also known as Instrumental Conditioning
Thorndike and his cats
Key difference from Classical Conditioning: subject’s behavior determines an outcome and is subsequently impacted by that outcome
Operant generally applies to skeletal muscles, classical to visceral responses
9. B.F. Skinner Most influential behaviorist
Envisioned a utopian society based upon his theories
Skinner Box
Ping-pong playing and airplane flying pigeons
Shaping – successive approximations
10. How do you shape behavior? Reinforcement – an event that increases the probability that a response will be repeated
Positive Reinforcement - presentation of an event that increases behavior (e.g., dessert)
Negative Reinforcement – strengthen behavior by the removal of an unpleasant stimulus (e.g., stop nagging)
Punishment – an event that decreases the probability that a response will be repeated
11. Punishment Punishment (Passive Avoidance) – unwanted response is followed by an aversive stimulus (e.g., spanking)
Omission Training – a desired stimulus is removed following an unwanted response (e.g., lose the car keys after breaking curfew)
12. Schedules of Reinforcement Continuous Reinforcement
Fixed-ratio schedule – fixed # of responses determines reinforcement. Rapid and steady response rate with pause after reward
Variable-ratio schedule – steady response rate
13. More Schedules – Interval Training Fixed-interval schedule – reinforcement is based upon the passage of time. Pause after reward and then an ever increasing rate of response
Variable-interval schedule – slow but steady response rate
14. Social Learning Approach Albert Bandura: Bobo doll. We learn by observing the behavior of others and from imagining the consequences of our own behavior.
15. Social Learning Theory Cont. Modeling: we imitate people who we
Resemble
Identify with
View as successful
Vicarious Reinforcement and Punishment