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Behavior Systems Theory. behavior systems theorycan explain many of the
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1. Biological Behaviorism: Timberlake 3 theories for why instinctual behavior
instinctive drift
pavlovian theories: by product of token-reward pairings
appetitive structure view:
species typical foraging and food handling
behaviors elicited by paring food with stimuli that resemble natural cues controlling food-gathering activities
both physical similarity and temporal relation to food
2. Behavior Systems Theory behavior systems theory
can explain many of the “biological boundaries”
basic model states:
behaviors which are elicited through noncontingent rewards (e.g.- as in autoshaping) are NOT arbitrary behaviors
are behaviors which make up a particular behavior system or mode for that organism
particular behavior elicited by a particular stimulus is a combination of many factors:
type of stimulus
type of reward
natural selection
past learning and conditioning
3. Behavior Systems Modes
4. Research evidence Timberlake's research demonstrates this:
with pigeons: where place feeder makes a difference
in the wall
in the floor
Also rat studies:
Exp 1: 4 groups: CS only: Random, Programmed Exit and Actual exit
25% of all rats showed orientation approach
Actual exit: marked increase in interactions for all subjects
(also chewing and grabbing)
Programmed exit:
stayed at food tray;
lots of post-pellet interaction with ball bearing
Food tray behavior blocked ball-bearing behavior
EXP 2: replication of Exp 1, except made trough for ball bearing so that could roll UNDER the rat
lots of carrying of ball bearing
saw more contact for actual exit and after-programmed exit groups;
not so much contact for before-programmed exit
EXP 3: omission trials: no food if contacted ball bearing
reduced contact significantly
extinction increased contact- most for before-contact
5. Research evidence EXP 4 and 5: positive response contingency: must contact ball bearing to obtain food
examined nature of contact: did topography change?
before-exit and exit groups
got lots and lots of contact- 100%
chews
carries
dug the ball bearing out of the entry hole
EXP 6: used naive animals; same procedures as in exp 4
occurrence of complex misbehavior NOT depend on
requirement of sustained contact with ball bearing
or on delay between contact and food delivery
misbehavior not affected by overlap between presence of bearing and presence of food
did find facilitation by prior experience with pre-pellet misbehavior:
naive animals showed less than experienced
6. So why is all of this important for applied psychologists? Even some human behaviors are likely to be “innate” or biologically based
Understanding underlying biology helps understand, predict and control human behavior (particularly “misbehavior”).
Understand that what is “optimal” in one setting may not be optimal in another- environment interacts with biology!
7. Sociobiology: Outgrowth of comparative psychology
Four classes of questions about Human behavior:
immediate causation
Development of behavior
Evolutionary history
Adaptive significance
Evolutionary research:
Collection of relevant evidence
behavior was or is adaptive
behavior apparent in most members of a species
behavior is apparent in most closely related species
behavior is influenced by genetics
examine plausible explanations
map the course of (human) evolution
8. Applications Development of phobias
Likely to be set of innate “fears”
Heights, water, snakes, poisons
Some developmental evidence:
Visual cliff studies (Campos, Langer, & Krowitz, 1970)
Developmental time course:
Precocial animals: show immediate fear
Human and other primate newborns: can see depth
Older infants begin to show fear
Innate recognition of mom;
Stranger anxiety
Separation anxiety
Probably biological foundation for this
9. Safety training: Understanding fear and reaction to fear critical
Fear/flight/fight response
SSDRs
But: humans can “overrule” innate fear responses with well learned response
Must over-train safety responses
Must be “stronger” than innate response
10. Mate Selection Mate Selection
sociobiology view: male
only impregnate 1 female every 9 mos x 30 years
by male limiting to 1 female- restrict # of offspring
roam: produce more
little parental investment
chimps, etc.: kill babies, impregnate females
female view:
more parental investment
more risk
remember: in humans are strong social/cultural norms that go along with this
11. Mate Selection Again: we can replace innate tendencies with well learned tendencies
Women choose men with $$$$ over muscles
Money gets you farther than muscles these days
Not necessarily true for men
Women who make lots of $$$$ less likely to bear offspring
Go for younger, more fertile women
Are we “designed” to be monogamous?
Chimp strategies suggest not really
Social norms, environmental strategies more likely override tendencies to be monogamous or not
remember: in humans are strong social/cultural norms that go along with this
12. Parenting Invest in child with greater probability of survival
Selective rearing
Even infanticide
Spacing of pregnancy
Mama bear syndrome
Don’t mess with a mom’s baby
Lots of parental investment
Mom, in sense, has more investment than dad
Even in animal world, moms tend to be more aggressive in defending child
13. Chance of Child abuse covaries with relatedness Abusive adults tend to be:
from abusive homes
poor impulse control
more accepting of violence
Often not directly related to the child
Environmental conditions
high stress
high frustration: no coping/parenting skills
In nature: low resources = increased probability of infanticide
Stressed animals eat their young!
Characteristics of abused child
selective: single one kid out
Often a child who “looks different”
premature or disabled = very high risk
lack of special char's
funny cry
not interact
in wild- not fit to survive, may be instinct to kill it
14. Parenting relatedness may be factor:
non-biological parent more likely to abuse
may be due to how related parent is
e.g. Nonhuman primate behavior
kill unrelated infants
abort fetuses
mate with all females
ensures that offspring are 'his'
suggestion: given above, physical characteristics may be "straw that broke camels back"
in general: premie ok
in bad environment- can be lethal
15. Sibling Rivalry children fight w/sibs:
limited resources
must compete for these resources
want parents’ attention and resources
Then why defend your sib in fight with other kids?
your sib is more closely related
thus: will protect: rather their genes (your genes) that unrelated genes be passed on
16. Altruism and moral behavior Aggression
Cost analysis: how much does it cost the animal?
If it gets the animal access- okay
Must distinguish between DEFENSIVE and OFFENSIVE behaviors
Biological wiring: hypothalamus
4 F’s of the hypothalamus
Interaction between sex/hunger/aggression/fear
3 Territoriality issues
Protect one’s mate/offspring
Protect one’s resources
Altruisim
17. Altruism and moral behavior Altruism
similar to sibling rivalry
save those genetically close to you first
then begin to save less and less related
e.g. cousins
similar culturally/nationally
racially, etc.
Reciprocal altruism: helps explain varying levels of altruism:
more likely to save someone like yourself
less likely to save someone far away, unlike yourself
more likely to save child
Helps understand why U.S. more likely to help Bosnia, or even Afghanistan than children in Africa.
18. Applications to education? Fire safety/evacuation training
Understanding human tendencies allows safety engineers to design better evacuation procedures
Firefighters: learn the behavior of fire, override natural fear of fire
Emergency preparedness
What kind of animal are you?
Level of anxiety
Types of preparedness
Behavior systems mode:
Understanding different environments may elicit different behaviors
Waiting behavior:
Engage in behaviors related to what waiting for/anticipating
Important for “side effects” of reinforcement
Stress effects: tends to bring out the animal in us!
19. Is sociobiology correct? Difficult question:
hard to test scientifically
tests usually limited to nonhumans
when do use humans, hard to factor out environmental issues
After the fact issue:
Researchers don’t live long enough to conduct the experiment!
Lifespan studies suggest stronger impact of biology than we like
Twin studies
Personality studies
Even IQ studies: heritability is about 50%
20. Is sociobiology correct? Differences may exist in different populations/genders, but causes difficult to determine
Example: IQ differences:
African Americans score an average of 15 points below Whites
Whites score an average of three points below East Asians
East Asians score an average of three points below middle Eastern European Jews
These differences are very stable, despite attempts to alter educational opportunities, etc.
Is it IQ, or is it due to different sets of behaviors which may underlie intelligence/academic performance?
Anxiety levels which then tie into academic performance/grades?
Importance of belonging/fitting in to group or being independent?
Are these socially driven or do they have strong underlying biology?
21. Is sociobiology correct? Can't argue with data: differences exist
BUT: causes for differences could be many:
Genetic difference
Prenatal differences:
prenatal care levels (tied to infant mortality rate)
Experience in womb: different even for twins
Underlying motivational differences:
could be biological
Lead to different performances
Educational opportunity differences
Differences in wiring in brain due to experience + genetics
Differences in experiences result in different brain wiring
Even differences in culture result in different brain wiring
Tests may be culturally biased
22. Is sociobiology correct? Bottom line:
we are animals: instinct and instinctual/genetic variables do affect our behavior
we are also highly social animals who are highly responsive to environmental change
we have a lot more neocortex- allows for more cognitive processing, and possibly less reliance on instinctual behaviors
Question: can an entity study itself?
can we ever truly determine the answer?
do we really want to know the answer?