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Psychology 281 Learning & Behaviour

Dive into the study of learning and behavior with Emily Batty in this course. Explore concepts like reflexes, innate behaviors, and evolutionary influences. Gain insights through quizzes, assignments, and exams.

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Psychology 281 Learning & Behaviour

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  1. Psychology 281Learning & Behaviour Emily Batty Spring Session 2008

  2. Syllabus • Course Website: • www.ualberta.ca/~egray/psyc281.html • Textbook: • Chance, P. (2006). Learning & Behavior: Active Learning Edition (Fifth Edition). USA: Thompson Wadsworth. • Prerequisite: • Psyco 104 (or equivalent)

  3. Instructor • Emily Batty • BS P-549 • 492-7886 (office) or 492-7139 (lab) • emily.batty@ualberta.ca • “Psych 281” in subject • Name & ID in message • Email is the BEST way to reach me!!! • Office hours: • Monday, 2-3:30, or by appointment

  4. Grading Breakdown • 1 midterm: 25% • Final: 35% • 2 assignments: 15% each • 5 quizzes: 2% each

  5. Schedule • Chapters 1,2,3: May 5, 7 • Chapters 4,5: May 12, 14 • NO CLASS: May 19 • Chapters 6: May 21  Assignment #1 due (21st) • MIDTERM: May 26 • Chapters 7,10: May ,26, 28 • Chapters 8,9: June 2, 4  Assignment #2 due (2nd) • Chapters 11,12: June 9, 11 • FINAL: Thursday, June 12 – 3 pm

  6. Grading • A+ (4.0) = 95-100% • A (4.0) = 90-94% • A- (3.7) = 85-89% • B+ (3.3) = 80-84% • B (3.0) = 75-79% • B- (2.7) = 70-74% • C+ (2.3) = 65-69% • C (2.0) = 60-64% • C- (1.7) = 55-59% • D+ (1.3)= 50-54% • D (1.0) = 45-49% • F (0.0) = 0-44% • Not graded on a curve • Grades will be based on: • Quizzes: 10% (5 x 2%) • Assignments: 30% (2 x 15%) • Midterm exam: 25% • Final exam: 35%

  7. Quizzes • 5 SHORT quizzes worth 2% each • Given at the BEGINNING of class • 10 minutes to answer • Based on readings or previous day’s lecture • e.g. • What is the definition of ‘learning’?

  8. Assignments • 2 assignments worth 15% each • One-page limit • You can work in pairs • Deductions for late assignments • e.g. Explain gambling behaviour in terms of different schedules of reinforcement. • Cheating & Plagarism • http://www.uofaweb.ualberta.ca/governance/StudentAppealsCheatsheet.cfm?

  9. Exams • Multiple Choice • Fill-in-the-blank • Short answer

  10. What is Learning?

  11. What is learning? • School kids? • Studying for exams? • Learning to drive? What else? • Cognitive constants across species • Cognitive differences across species • How to make good rat poison?

  12. Definitions • Learning is: • Some event at Time 1 affects behaviour at Time 2 • Problem with this definition… • A change in behaviour due to experience • A change in behaviour is not sufficient to show learning • Not all behaviours are learned • Even some complex behaviours are innate • Reflexes, fixed action patterns, general behaviour traits

  13. Behaviour & Evolution Where do these innate behaviours come from?

  14. Natural Selection • Variation, inheritance, selection, differential reproductive success • Acts on the level of the individual • Natural selection commonly known to work on physical traits • E.g. white & black peppered moths

  15. Natural Selection • Behaviours, as well as physical characteristics, can be selected for! • Survival of the Sneakiest: • http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/0_0_0/sneakermales_01 • Evolutionary advantages for behaviours like reflexes? • More complex behaviours, like altruism and pair bonding?

  16. Artificial Selection • Animal breeders • Pet domestication • Genetic engineering

  17. Sexual Selection • Mate choice based on non-adaptive traits • i.e. traits that don’t increase survivability may evolve if they help an organism compete for mates • Peacocks

  18. Limits of Natural Selection • SLOW! • Generational lag • Not very helpful within a lifetime • e.g. new predators

  19. Innate Behaviours Reflexes, Fixed Action Patterns & General Behaviour Traits

  20. Reflexes • Response to an environmental stimuli (i.e. an event) • Relationship between a specific event and a simple response • Not learned, innate responses • Survival mechanism • Primitive reflexes

  21. Inter-neuron BRAIN Sensory neuron Motor neuron

  22. changes in reflexes • Reflexes are generally very stereotypic • i.e. they don’t change much in terms of form, strength • However, they can vary between people & time Sensitization & Habituation • Simple forms of learning • Changes in reflexive behaviour patterns • Different from sensory adaptation and fatique • Discreet stimulus

  23. sensitization • Intensity and repetition of the event can affect habituation & sensitization • Sensitization: an INCREASE in the intensity or probability of response to stimuli • Sensitization example: • Light touch: no response • Painful shock: flinch • Light touch: flinch

  24. habituation • Habituation: a DECREASE in the intensity or probability of response to stimuli • Stimulus specific • Habituation example: • Loud noise: startle • Loud noise: less startle • Loud noise: less startle

  25. Fixed Action Patterns • Similar to reflexes: innate and very stereotypic • Involve more complex actions, or a series of actions • Set off by a ‘sign stimulus’ or ‘releaser’ • Start-to-finish

  26. MAIL fixed action patterns

  27. Other examples of FAPs • Greylag Goose rolling eggs • Gulls • Yawning? • Westermarck effect

  28. General Behaviour Traits • Behavioural traits strongly influenced by genes • Not the same as FAPs • More plastic, flexible • No single sign stimulus • Species specific defense reactions • Rats: freeze

  29. Evolved modifiability • Natural selection is slow, so innate behaviours are not enough… • Ability to learn • Nature vs. Nurture

  30. Measuring Learning

  31. Learning & Behaviour • Remember: Learning is a change in behaviour due to experience • Why behaviour?? • Hard Line Behaviourism? • Watson • Skinner

  32. The Science of Learning • Avoiding circular explanations Q: Why did the chicken cross the road? A: To get to the other side. A: Because it crossed the road Q: How do we know the chicken wanted to get to the other side?

  33. Operational Definitions • A precise way of defining events • Multiple observers can agree on occurrence of event • Or, quantify an event • Inter-rater reliability • How to define choice? • When bird lands on perch? • When bird pulls off Velcro? • When beak touches Velcro?

  34. Measuring Learning • Reduction in errors • Change in speed • Change in topography (form) • Change in intensity • Change in latency • Change in rate or frequency

  35. How to study learning • Anecdotal evidence • First- or second-hand reports of personal experiences • Good for ideas, but not very scientific

  36. How to study learning • Anecdotal evidence • Naturalistic Observation • Observe subjects in their natural setting • Limited controls • Little to no interaction

  37. How to study learning • Anecdotal evidence • Naturalistic Observation • Case Studies • More detail than an anecdote • Study an individual/event/small group in detail • Time consuming • Hard to generalize • Doesn’t answer all questions (e.g. causation)

  38. How to study learning • Anecdotal evidence • Naturalistic Observation • Case Studies • Descriptive Studies • Questionnaires, statistical analyses • More information than case studies, but less detail • Correlations, not causation

  39. How to study learning • Anecdotal evidence • Naturalistic Observation • Case Studies • Descriptive Studies • Experimental Studies • Manipulate variables • Different designs • High control • Measures effect of specific variables on behaviour

  40. Types of Variables • Independent variables • Manipulated • Dependent variables • Measured • Controlled variables • Things to keep constant

  41. Experimental Designs • Between Subjects design • Two or more groups of participants/subjects • Experimental & Control groups • Manipulate independent variable between groups • One group gets it, and one doesn’t • Measure dependent variable between groups • Assignment into groups can be random or matched

  42. Between Subjects

  43. Experimental Designs • Within Subjects design • One group of participants/subjects, compare across time points

  44. Experimental Designs • Within Subjects Designs • ABA reversals

  45. Evaluation Research • Validity • How well a study, a procedure, or a measure does what it is supposed to do • Reliability • How well a measure can be reproduced • Replicability

  46. Evaluating Research • Sampling bias • Sample: collection of subjects selected for a study • Population: much larger collection of animals or people from which the sample was drawn • Distortions in self-reports • Self-reports: subjects give a verbal/written account of their own performance

  47. Evaluation Research • Placebo effects • Demand characteristics • Experimental bias • Intentional and unintentional • Single- and double-blind procedures

  48. Animal Research • How useful to human learning? • Control over variables • Ethics • Cognitive constants, differences • Comparative Cognition • Animal Rights • Computer simulations

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