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Albert Bandura

Ninth Edition. 13. Albert Bandura. Albert Bandura. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning. Thorndike’s and Watson’s Explanations Thorndike (1901):“Nothing. . . favors the hypothesis that they have any general ability to learn to do things from seeing others do them” (p. 42).

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Albert Bandura

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  1. Ninth Edition 13 Albert Bandura

  2. Albert Bandura

  3. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning • Thorndike’s and Watson’s Explanations • Thorndike (1901):“Nothing. . . favors the hypothesis that they have any general ability to learn to do things from seeing others do them” (p. 42). • Watson (1908): Learning can result only from direct experience and not from indirect or vicarious experience.

  4. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning • Miller and Dollard’s Explanation • Within the framework of Hullian learning theory, if imitative behavior is reinforced, it will be strengthened. • A special case of instrumental conditioning.

  5. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning • Miller and Dollard’s Three Categories • Same behavior: Two or more individuals respond to the same situation in the same way. (Audience Behavior) • Copying behavior: The guiding of one person’s behavior by another. (Teaching)

  6. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning • Miller and Dollard’s Three Categories • Matched-dependent behavior: An observer is reinforced for blindly repeating the actions of a model. (When in Rome….)

  7. Earlier Explanations of Observational Learning • The Skinnerian Analysis of Observational Learning • Very similar to Miller and Dollard’s. • Imitation is nothing more than a discriminative operant.

  8. Recent Research—Nonhumans Can Learn by Observing • Quail can perform an observed response even when there is a thirty-minute delay between observation and performance (Dorrance & Zentall, 2001). • Chimpanzees that watch another chimpanzee spit water into a cylinder in order to float a peanut to the top of the cylinder also learn this action.

  9. Bandura's Explanation of Observational Learning • Observational learning may or may not involve imitation. • What you learn in observation is information. • Observational learning is much more complex than simple imitation.

  10. The BoBo Doll Experiment • Children observed a film in which a model was shown hitting and kicking a large doll. • One group saw the model reinforced for aggressiveness. • A second group of children saw the model punished for aggressiveness. • For a third group, the consequences were neutral.

  11. The BoBo Doll Experiment • When exposed to the doll…

  12. The BoBo Doll Experiment • Children’s behavior was influenced by indirect or vicarious reinforcement and punishment. • When offered a positive incentive for being aggressive, ALL children were aggressive, regardless of the prior vicarious experience.

  13. Major Theoretical Concepts • Attentional Processes • A person’s sensory capacities will influence the attentional processes. • Characteristics of models will also affect the extent to which they are attended to. • Models will be attended to more often if they are similar to the observer.

  14. Major Theoretical Concepts • Retentional Processes • Once information is stored cognitively, it can be retrieved covertly, rehearsed, and strengthened long after the observational learning has taken place. • Bandura (1977), “It is the advanced capacity for symbolization that enables humans to learn much of their behavior by observation” (p. 25).

  15. Major Theoretical Concepts • Behavioral Production Processes • Determine the extent to which that which has been learned is translated into performance. • One may learn a great deal cognitively but be unable to translate that information into behavior.

  16. Major Theoretical Concepts • Motivational Processes • A major departure from traditional reinforcement theories. • Reinforcement is not needed for learning but provides a motive for utilizing what has been learned.

  17. MAJOR THEORETICAL CONCEPTS

  18. Major Theoretical Concepts • Reciprocal Determinism Behavior, the environment, and people (and their beliefs) all interact.

  19. Major Theoretical Concepts • Self-Regulation of Behavior • Humans learn • Performance standards, the basis of self-evaluation. • Perceived self-efficacy, one’s beliefs concerning what one is capable of doing.

  20. Major Theoretical Concepts • Moral Conduct • Departure from one’s moral code brings self-contempt. • Bandura (1977): “There is no more devastating punishment than self-contempt” (p. 154).

  21. Major Theoretical Concepts • There are several mechanisms that can be used to dissociate reprehensible acts from self-sanctions. • Make it possible for people to depart radically from their moral principles without experiencing self-contempt.

  22. Self-Exonerating Mechanisms • Moral Justification • Reprehensible behavior becomes a means to a higher purpose and therefore is justifiable. • Euphemistic Labeling • Calling an otherwise reprehensible act something other than what it really is.

  23. Self-Exonerating Mechanisms • Advantageous Comparison • Comparing one’s self-deplored acts with even more heinous acts.

  24. Self-Exonerating Mechanisms • Displacement of Responsibility • “I did it, because I was ordered to do so.” • Diffusion of Responsibility • “Everyone else was doing it too.”

  25. Self-Exonerating Mechanisms • Dehumanization • If individuals are subhuman, they can be treated inhumanly. • Attribution of Blame • Blaming the victim.

  26. Practical Applications • Modeling in the Clinical Setting • Bandura, Blanchard, and Ritter (1969): Adults and adolescents with a snake phobia • Group 1 (symbolic modeling) exposed to a film. • Group 2 (modeling-participation) watched a model and then were helped by the model.

  27. Practical Applications • Modeling in the Clinical Setting • Bandura, Blanchard, and Ritter (1969): Adults and adolescents with a snake phobia • Group 3 received desensitization therapy. • Group 4 received no treatment of any kind.

  28. Bandura, Blanchard, and Ritter (1969)

  29. Bandura, Blanchard, and Ritter (1969)Generalized Effects

  30. News and Entertainment Media • Bandura (1986): “Analyses of televised programs reveal that violent conduct is portrayed, for the most part, as permissible, successful, and relatively clean . . . . “(p. 292)

  31. News and Entertainment Media • “Males exposed to modeled sexual assault behave more punitively toward women than if exposed to modeled sexual intimacy devoid of aggressions . . . .” (pp. 294–295)

  32. Mirror Neurons—Observational Learning • Mirror neurons reveal one way in which the brain encodes a behavior made by another animal, thereby facilitating execution of the same behavior.

  33. Mirror Neurons—Observational Learning • Chameleon Effect: The “nonconscious mimicry of the postures, mannerisms, facial expressions, and other behaviors of one’s interaction partners” (Chartrand & Bargh, 1999, p. 893)

  34. Bandura on Education • Teachers can be highly influential models. • They can model skills, problem-solving strategies, moral codes, performance standards, general rules and principles, and creativity. • For students, additional benefits can accrue from imitating an effective model.

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