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Learning

Learning. Learning. Any enduring change in behavior based on experience Enduring change in behavior If behavior does not change then learning did not take place Experience We encounter some form of a learning event. Learning Theory. Experience shapes behavior Touch a hot stove

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Learning

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  1. Learning

  2. Learning • Any enduring change in behavior based on experience • Enduring change in behavior • If behavior does not change then learning did not take place • Experience • We encounter some form of a learning event

  3. Learning Theory • Experience shapes behavior • Touch a hot stove • Learning is adaptive • Never touch a hot stove again • We can discover the laws of learning through systematic experimentation

  4. Classical Conditioning • Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) • Anything that stimulates an automatic (reflexive) response • Food • Unconditioned reflex (UCR) • Automatic response • Hunger

  5. Classical Conditioning • Conditioned stimulus (CS) • Pair a neutral item with a UCS • McDonald's golden arches (neutral) & french fries (UCS) • The golden arches become a conditioned stimulus (CS) for the french fries

  6. Classical Conditioning • Conditioned response (CR) • The UCR (desire for french fries) becomes associated with the CS (golden arches) • Hunger (UCR) leads to a desire to eat at McDonalds (CR)

  7. Ivan Pavlov • Ivan Pavlov noticed a peculiar phenomenon while studying the digestive systems of dogs • When presented with food (UCS) a dog would salivate (UCR) • Pavlov decided to ring a bell (neutral stimulus) just before presenting food to a dog • The sound of the bell (CS) quickly led to the dog salivating

  8. Classical Conditioning • Pavlov’s discovery, classical conditioning, can account for a great deal of behavior • For example, quickly write down three words to describe a Ferrari sports car • Your responses were the results of classical conditioning

  9. Little Albert • Little Albert was a normal, well adjusted, 9 month old • Albert was given objects by John Watson including: • a white lab rat • a white coat • other things that incorporated the color white • Watson tested Albert’s response to a loud noise (UCS) by banging on a steel bar directly behind his head • Albert reacted by jumping, falling forward, and whimpering

  10. Little Albert • Two months later Watson selected a white rat, something Albert was use to playing with, as the CS • Now every time Albert reached out to the white rat Watson struck the steel bar creating a loud sound • Albert immediately became afraid of the white rat • Albert also feared anything with the color white such as a white coat, Santa mask, etc

  11. Little Albert • Watson moved Albert from the test room to a large lecture hall, Albert reacted the same • Watson waited for a period of time and retested Albert, found the same negative responses • Albert’s mother removed him from the study. Watson never had a chance to de-program Albert

  12. Conditioned Responses • Conditioned taste aversions • Nasty tasting cough syrup • Conditioned emotional responses • Your favorite song generates positive emotions • Conditioned immune responses • Chemotherapy

  13. Stimulus Generalization • Once you have learned to pair a given CS with a UCS you tend to generalize to stimuli of a similar nature • “The first person I ever met from Greece was a really nice person. You know, the Greeks are nice people!” • The more similar a stimuli is to the original CS the more likely generalization will occur

  14. Stimulus Discrimination • Opposite of stimulus generalization • Learn to respond to a restricted range of stimuli • My ex was from California • I know a lot of good people from California, my ex just isn’t one of them

  15. Extinction • Occurs when a CR is weakened to the point of being eliminated • The CS occurs without the UCS • A police officer on beat patrol (CS) has repeated friendly encounters with citizens in a high crime area • Citizens gradually learn not to associate the officer with being arrested • Spontaneous Recovery • Tendency for CS to come back, normally a short lived phenomena • Citizen observes an arrest and, temporarily, regains a fear of the police officer

  16. Factors Affecting Classical Conditioning • Interstimulus Interval • Time period between CS and UCS. The shorter the better • One’s Learning History • Prior experience with similar CS • Preparedness to Learn • Some CS/UCS easier to learn than others

  17. Operant Conditioning • Operant conditioning involves one’s behavior creating a consequence • Operants (behaviors) that we take with the goal of generating a response • Law of effect - Edward Thorndike suggested that the likelihood of a behavior being repeated depends upon the perceived consequence of the behavior

  18. Law of Effect • Will a student cheat on an exam? Law of Effect states the student will focus on the probable outcome: • Excellent chance of getting caught - Probably won’t cheat • Little chance of getting caught - More inclined to cheat

  19. Classical versus Operant • Classical Conditioning - The environment impacts you • Someone else links food to McDonald’s arches • Operant (Instrumental) Conditioning - You emit behavior to influence the environment • You do something with the expectation of an outcome

  20. Reinforcement • Reinforcement involves any consequence that increases the probability that a response will occur • Positive Reinforcement • The consequence of a behavior makes the behavior more likely to happen -I buy my first lottery ticket and win $1000.00 -I buy more lottery tickets

  21. Reinforcement • Negative Reinforcement • The termination of an adverse stimulus makes a behavior more likely tohappen. This can be either an escape or avoidance - Escape - I hit the mute button on the TV and the commercial goes silent - Avoid - I alter my route to work in order to avoid a known speed trap

  22. Punishment • Punishment is any consequence that decreases the probability of a behavior being repeated • Positive Punishment - Involves a consequence that is not good: • Going to jail for DUI • Negative Punishment - Something good is taken away • You cheat on me and I’ll stop loving you

  23. Problems with Punishment • The person being punished isn’t sure what behavior caused the punishment • Why are you yelling at me? • The person being punished learns to fear the punisher. The person doing the punishing, not the behavior, becomes the issue • I’m not misbehaving, my dad is just a mean hateful person • Punishment may not eliminate the rewards for a behavior • Getting drunk and then driving home is more important than maybe going to jail again

  24. Problems with Punishment • People tend to punish when they are angry and upset • The behavior being punished is lost in the arguing and emotions • Aggression leads to aggression • Children who are physically beaten tend to become child abusers when they become parents

  25. Extinction • Extinction of an operant behavior tends to occur if the expected consequence of a behavior fails to happen on repeated occasions • At first you always returned my calls during the work day. Then you didn’t return my calls. Now I don’t call during your work shifts.

  26. Schedules of Reinforcement • Continuous Reinforcement Schedule • The consequence is the same every time the behavior is emitted • Partial (intermittent) schedules of reinforcement • Behavior is reinforced only part of the time it is emitted • Surprisingly, behaviors that emit partial reinforcement are less likely to become extinct than are behaviors exposed to continuous reinforcement

  27. Schedules of Reinforcement • Ratio Schedules • Fixed-ratio schedule • Reinforcement on a set schedule such as every 5th time • Variable-ratio schedules • Reinforcement is unpredictable

  28. Intermittent Reinforcement • Discriminate Stimulus • Contingencies are in effect so that reinforcement only produces the desired behavior under certain circumstances • I will cheer loudly at sports stadiums but never raise my voice in museums

  29. Society & Operant Conditioning • Operant Conditioning works both ways • The punishment is a negative reinforcer for the parent if the child’s behavior in question ceases. • Increases likelihood similar forms of punishment will be used by the parent in the future • Behavioral economics • Links reinforcement with economics • If I like both Pepsi and Coke, and the price of Pepsi goes up, then I drink more Coke

  30. Characteristics of the Learner • Shaping • Involves taking a series of steps to elicit the desired behavior • Often used when teaching a new language • Chaining • Link together a sequence of existing responses in a novel manner • Can be used to improve athletic performance

  31. Characteristics of the learner • Individuals differ in their ability to be conditioned • Some of us learn quicker than our classmates • Some of us are more aggressive when confronted with others attempts to condition us while others’ tend to be avoidant

  32. Drive Reduction Theory • Drive - An internal state that impels one to act • Reinforcers - Stimulants that reduce drives • Primary Drives - Central to survival • Hunger-Food • Thirst-Water • Secondary Drives - Culturally defined • Money • Frequent flier points from an airline

  33. Role of Feelings • A behavior that is followed by a pleasurable feeling is reinforced • A behavior followed by a negative feeling will be less likely to occur • Guilt serves as a negative feeling therefore it may reduce guilt producing behavior

  34. Gray’s 3 Behavioral Systems • Behavioral Approach System - Pleasurable emotional states and approach-oriented behaviors • Behavioral Inhibition System - Involves potential dangers and involves anxiety • Fight-Flight System - In the face of terror one will either elect to fight it out or will attempt to run away

  35. Social Learning Theory • Referred to as: • Cognitive Theory, Social Learning Theory, Cognitive-Behavioral theory • Suggests that how we construct the environment is as important to learning as actual environmental contingencies • Involves one’s experiences and expectations • For those who grew up in small towns, NYC may seem very threatening

  36. Latent Learning • Suggests that learning involves the creation of “cognitive maps” that we can recall at a later time under the right circumstances • Once learned, not forgotten • One will respond to new circumstances with old behaviors

  37. Cognitive-Social Theory • Proposes that one’s expectations about the consequences of a behavior render the behavior more or less likely to occur • If I am friendly towards new classmates then they will be friendly towards me • If I ignore those in out groups they will likely ignore me in the future

  38. Expectancies • Self-fulfilling prophecies involve expectations of a given outcome leading to behavior that ensures the outcome • John just knows he will fail the final exam • John doesn’t study • Sure enough, John fails the final exam due to his lack of preparation

  39. Locus of Control • Generalized expectations on whether (or not) our behavior can bring about a desired outcome • Internal Locus of Control - I believe I can control my own fate • More likely to take action • If I study hard I will get a good grade • External Locus of Control - I can’t control my fate • More likely to be passive • It doesn’t matter whether I study or not, the professor doesn’t give good grades to student athletes

  40. Learned Helplessness • An expectancy that one cannot escape adverse events • Simply don’t try • Often linked to depression

  41. Observational Learning • Also referred to as vicarious learning • We observe the consequences of others behaviors • What does father do when my older brother comes home after his curfew?

  42. Modeling • We tend to model behavior of someone we admire or an authority figure • Role models are those we emulate • Public figures become role models whether they want to be or not

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