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Operant Conditioning. Classical v. Operant Conditioning. Operant Voluntary Behavior Extinction Spontaneous Recovery Generalization Discrimination. Classical Reflexive Behavior Extinction Spontaneous Recovery Generalization Discrimination. History of Behaviorism.
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Classical v. Operant Conditioning • Operant • Voluntary Behavior • Extinction • Spontaneous Recovery • Generalization • Discrimination • Classical • Reflexive Behavior • Extinction • Spontaneous Recovery • Generalization • Discrimination
History of Behaviorism • Classical Conditioning: • Pavlov, Watson, Rescorla
Edward L. Thorndike (1874-1949) • Animal Intelligence – Cats • Trial and Error Learning • Instrumental Conditioning • Law of Effect
B. F. Skinner (1904-1990) • Susquehanna, Pennsylvania • B.A. in English • MA and PhD from Harvard in 1930-1931 • 1936 @ U of Minnesota • 1945 @ U of Indiana • 1948 @ Harvard • Died in 1990
“Operant” A B C • Operant Behaviour: a type of behaviour that operates on the environment to have a particular effect. • Operant Conditioning: a form of learning whereby voluntary behaviour comes to be controlled by consequences.
Operant Conditioning A B C Antecedent Consequence Behavior
Operant Conditioning Antecedent A B C
Operant Conditioning A B C Behavior Voluntary “Operant”
Operant Conditioning A B C Consequence Punishment Reinforcement
Operant Conditioning Positive Reinforcement
Operant Conditioning A B C Tell Joke Consequence Antecedent Behavior In Class Laugh
Operant Conditioning A B C Students Take Notes Consequence Antecedent Behavior Professor Talks Better Grades
Operant Conditioning Negative Reinforcement
Operant Conditioning A B C Take Aspirin Antecedent Consequence Behavior Relief Headache
Operant Conditioning A B C Put seat belt on Antecedent Consequence Behavior Relief Car buzzing
Operant Conditioning A B C Eat Too Fast Antecedent Consequence Behavior Food at Table Pain
Operant Conditioning A B C Say something Inappropriate Antecedent Consequence Behavior Social Situation Embarrassment
Operant Conditioning A B C Drive to Fast Antecedent Consequence Behavior On Highway Money Taken Away
Operant Conditioning A B C Tantrum Antecedent Consequence Behavior At Home… Timeout
Shaping • successive approximations toward a goal • a process whereby reinforcements are given for behavior directed toward a goal • reinforcement is given for approximations toward a desired goal
Making Shaping Effective • 1) Define the goal • 2) Determine a starting point • 3) Pick a reinforcer • 4) Determine the steps
Schedules of reinforcement • 1. Continuous (CRF) • good to start with when shaping behavior • 2. Non continuous (intermittent, partial) • is one in which only some responses are reinforced • four basic types
Intermittent Reinforcement • Fixed Ratio (FR):reinforcement delivered after fixed number of correct responses. • low resistance to extinction
Intermittent Reinforcement • 2. Fixed Interval: Reinforcement for next correct response after a fixed amount of time since last reinforcement. • low resistance to extinction
Intermittent Reinforcement • 3. Variable Ratio: reinforcement after varying number of correct responses • high resistance to extinction
Intermittent Reinforcement • 4. Variable Interval: reinforcement after varying time since the last reinforcement. • high resistance to extinction
Extinction • 1) B C • 2) B nothing Result: decrease in B
Extinction • B (tantrum) C (being picked up/ attention) • Problem: • Positive reinforcement for the child: to continue having tantrums. • Negative reinforcement for the parent: pick up child: avoid tantrum • Reinforcement Trap
Behavioral Theories anxiety is a CR to environmental events
Two-Factor model • 1st Phase (acquisition) • Classical Conditioning • 2nd Phase (maintenance) • Operant Conditioning A-->B-->C
Phobias – other explanations • observational learning • Phase 1 – watch a model • acquisition • Phase 2 – operant conditioning • maintenance