1 / 16

PSY402 Theories of Learning

PSY402 Theories of Learning. Chapter 12 (pg 303-327) Biological Influences on Learning. Limits to Learning. How general are the laws of learning? Skinner’s rules work in both lab and real-world settings, across species. Learning doesn’t explain all aspects of behavior.

Download Presentation

PSY402 Theories of Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PSY402Theories of Learning Chapter 12 (pg 303-327) Biological Influences on Learning

  2. Limits to Learning • How general are the laws of learning? • Skinner’s rules work in both lab and real-world settings, across species. • Learning doesn’t explain all aspects of behavior. • Organization of behavior already exists within an organism. • Learning modifies that organization.

  3. Behavior Systems Approach • Timberlake – learning changes the integration, tuning, instigation or linkages within a behavior system. • Different cues are salient to different behavior modes. • Variations in learning occur across species because their behavior systems are different. • Variations in behavior are the result of predispositions and constraints.

  4. Animal Misbehavior • Breland & Breland – trained 38 species of animals for Busch Gardens. • Elicitation of foraging and food-handling instincts interferes with performance of operant routines. • Instinctive drift • Pig and piggy bank • Raccoons and food-washing

  5. Explaining Misbehavior • Does misbehavior result from operant food reinforcement or classical conditioning? • Timberlake’s appetitive structure view – both kinds of learning contribute to animal misbehavior. • Pairings with food are necessary but not sufficient to evoke misbehavior.

  6. Schedule-Induced Behavior • Superstitious behavior – induced by FI schedules. • Animal associates whatever it is doing at the time with the reinforcement. • Ritualistic, stereotyped behavior during the interval. • Two kinds of behavior: • Terminal – reinforcer-oriented • Interim – follows reinforcement.

  7. Effects with Humans • Superstitious gambling behavior. • Schedule-induced behavior may be related to alcoholism: • Excessive drinking, eating, smoking may occur immediately after reinforcement. • Weak and inconsistent in humans. • Develops rapidly in humans, stops quickly

  8. Flavor-Aversion Learning • Long-delay learning – does not depend on contiguity. • Preparedness – certain stimuli are innately more likely to be associated with a UCS than others. • Visual cues more salient to birds • Taste cues more salient to rats • Salience depends on when the animals seeks its food (nocturnal or not).

  9. Applications • Cancer chemotherapy (UCS) causing nausea may be associated with hospital food (CS). • Preexposure to food without the toxic drug or drug without food may help prevent food aversions. • Coyotes and wolves can be taught to avoid attacking and eating sheep using flavor-aversion learning.

  10. Explanations • Learned-Safety theory – an evolved mechanism unique to flavor-aversion to protect animal. • Ingestional neophobia – small quantities consumed at first. • Concurrent-Interference view – long delay occurs because the animal doesn’t eat anything else for a while

  11. Imprinting • Lorenz – social attachment process where young ducks follow their mother. • Ducks imprint to: • Moving objects with lifelike motion • Vocalizing objects, short rhythmic sounds, not high-pitched • Objects that are the right size

  12. Other Factors in Imprinting • Harlow – baby primates attach to soft terry cloth rather than wire. • Rocking rather than stationary • Warm rather than cold • Ainsworth – attachment to a responsive mother. • Occurs more easily during sensitive period of animal’s life. • 6 to 12 months for humans

  13. Other Kinds of Imprinting • Sexual preferences – occurs early in development, long before sexual maturity, not modifiable later. • Food preferences – preferences established early and permanent. • People prefer familiar foods • Food aversions develop between 6 & 12 yrs

  14. Nature of Imprinting • Both instinctive and associative processes are involved. • Associative-learning view – objects become familiar before fear system matures • Familiar objects reduce fear later, so become preferred due to relief. • Harlow’s studies contradict this. • Some objects are more imprintable.

  15. Instinctive View of Imprinting • Organisms contain an innate schema of the imprinting object • Evoluntary pressure to learn the right thing. • Response is hard to change. • Extinction does not lead to loss of preference. • Abused primates and children cling to abusive mothers despite punishment.

  16. Avoidance of Aversive Events • Species-specific defense reactions (SSDR) – instinctive responses to specific dangers. • Rats – running, freezing, fighting. • Cues predicting danger also select the specific response. • Escape and avoidance behaviors are learned more readily when they incorporate SSDR.

More Related