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Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed)

Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed). Chapter 8 Learning AP Psychology Lawton Chiles High School Mrs. Womble. Learning. Learning relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience experience (nurture) is the key to learning. Association. We learn by association

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Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed)

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  1. Myers’ PSYCHOLOGY (6th Ed) Chapter 8 Learning • AP Psychology • Lawton Chiles High School • Mrs. Womble

  2. Learning • Learning • relatively permanent change in an organism’s behavior due to experience • experience (nurture) is the key to learning

  3. Association • We learn by association • Our minds naturally connect events that occur in sequence • Aristotle 2000 years ago • John Locke and David Hume 200 yrs ago • Associative Learning • learning that two events occur together • two stimuli • a response and its consequences

  4. Association Event 1 Event 2 • Learning to associate two events Sea snail associates splash with a tail shock Seal learns to expect a snack for its showy antics

  5. Two related events: Stimulus 1 Lightning Stimulus 2 Thunder Result after repetition Stimulus We see lightning Response We wince anticipating thunder Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • We learn to associate two stimuli

  6. Response: Pushing vending machine button Consequence: Receiving a candy bar Operant Conditioning • We learn to associate a response and its consequence

  7. Behaviorism • John B. Watson • viewed psychology as objective science • generally agreed-upon consensus today • recommended study of behavior without reference to unobservable mental processes • not universally accepted by all schools of thought today

  8. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Ivan Pavlov • 1849-1936 • Russian physician/ neurophysiologist • Nobel Prize in 1904 • studied digestive secretions

  9. Pavlov’s Classic Experiment Before Conditioning UCS (food in mouth) Neutral stimulus (tone) UCR (salivation) No salivation During Conditioning After Conditioning UCS (food in mouth) CS (tone) Neutral stimulus (tone) UCR (salivation) CR (salivation)

  10. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Pavlov’s device for recording salivation

  11. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Classical Conditioning • organism comes to associate two stimuli • lightning and thunder • tone and food • begins with a reflex • a neutral stimulus is paired with a stimulus that evokes the reflex • neutral stimulus eventually comes to evoke the reflex

  12. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) • effective stimulus that unconditionally-automatically and naturally- triggers a response • Unconditioned Response(UCR) • unlearned, naturally occurring automatic response to the unconditioned stimulus • salivation when food is in the mouth

  13. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Conditioned Stimulus (CS) • previously neutral stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus, comes to trigger a conditioned response • Conditioned Response (CR) • learned response to a previously neutral conditioned stimulus

  14. Conditioning • Acquisition • the initial stage of learning, during which a response is established and gradually strengthened • in classical conditioning, the phase in which a stimulus comes to evoke a conditioned response • in operant conditioning, the strengthening of a reinforced response

  15. Conditioning • Extinction • diminishing of a CR • in classical conditioning, when a UCS does not follow a CS • in operant conditioning, when a response is no longer reinforced

  16. Acquisition (CS+UCS) Strength of CR Spontaneous recovery of CR Extinction (CS alone) Extinction (CS alone) Pause Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning

  17. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Spontaneous Recovery • reappearance, after a rest period, of an extinguished CR • Generalization • tendency for a stimuli similar to CS to evoke similar responses

  18. Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning • Discrimination • in classical conditioning, the ability to distinguish between a CS and other stimuli that do not signal and UCS • in operant conditioning, responding differently to stimuli that signal a behavior will be reinforced or will not be reinforced

  19. 60 Drops of saliva in 30 seconds 50 40 30 20 10 Hind paw Pelvis Shoulder Front paw 0 Thigh Trunk Foreleg Part of body stimulated Generalization

  20. UCS (passionate kiss) UCR (sexual arousal) CS (onion breath) UCS (passionate Kiss) UCR (sexual arousal) CS (onion breath) CR (sexual arousal) Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning

  21. UCS (drug) UCR (nausea) CS (waiting room) UCS (drug) UCR (nausea) CS (waiting room) CR (nausea) Nausea Conditioning in Cancer Patients

  22. Operant Conditioning • Operant Conditioning • type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by reinforcement or diminished if followed by punishment • Law of Effect • Thorndike’s principle that behaviors followed by favorable consequences become more likely and behaviors followed by unfavorable consequences become less likely

  23. Operant Conditioning • Operant Behavior • complex or voluntary behaviors • push button, perform complex task • operates (acts) on environment • produces consequences • Respondent Behavior • occurs as an automatic response to stimulus • behavior learned through classical conditioning

  24. Operant Conditioning • B.F. Skinner (1904-1990) • elaborated Thorndike’s Law of Effect • developed behavioral technology

  25. Operant Chamber • Skinner Box • soundproof chamber with a bar or key that an animal presses or pecks to release a food or water reward • contains a device to record responses

  26. Operant Conditioning • Reinforcer • any event that strengthens the behavior it follows • Shaping • conditioning procedure in which reinforcers guide behavior toward closer approximations of a desired goal • Successive Approximations • reward behaviors that increasingly resemble desired behavior

  27. Principles of Reinforcement • Primary Reinforcer • innately reinforcing stimulus • satisfies a biological need • Secondary Reinforcer • conditioned reinforcer • learned through association with primary reinforcer

  28. Schedules of Reinforcement • Continuous Reinforcement • reinforcing the desired response each time it occurs • learning occurs rapidly • extinction occurs rapidly • Partial Reinforcement • reinforcing a response only part of the time • results in slower acquisition • greater resistance to extinction

  29. Schedules of Reinforcement • Fixed Ratio (FR) • reinforces a response only after a specified number of responses • faster you respond the more rewards you get • different ratios • very high rate of responding • like piecework pay

  30. Schedules of Reinforcement • Variable Ratio (VR) • reinforces a response after an unpredictable number of responses • average ratios • like gambling, fishing • very hard to extinguish because of unpredictability

  31. Schedules of Reinforcement • Fixed Interval (FI) • reinforces a response only after a specified time has elapsed • response occurs more frequently as the anticipated time for reward draws near

  32. Schedules of Reinforcement • Variable Interval (VI) • reinforces a response at unpredictable time intervals • produces slow steady responding • like pop quiz

  33. Number of responses Fixed Ratio 1000 Variable Ratio Fixed Interval 750 Rapid responding near time for reinforcement 500 Variable Interval 250 Steady responding 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Time (minutes) Schedules of Reinforcement

  34. Punishment • Punishment • aversive event that decreases the behavior that it follows • powerful controller of unwanted behavior

  35. Problems with Punishment • Punished behavior is not forgotten, it's suppressed- behavior returns when punishment is no longer eminent • Causes increased aggression- shows that aggression is a way to cope with problems- Explains why aggressive delinquents and abusive parents come from abusive homes

  36. Problems with Punishment • Creates fear that can generalize to desirable behaviors, e.g. fear of school, learned helplessness, depression • Does not necessarily guide toward desired behavior- reinforcement tells you what to do--punishment tells you what not to do- Combination of punishment and reward can be more effective than punishment alone • Punishment teaches how to avoid it

  37. Cognition and Operant Conditioning • Cognitive Map • mental representation of the layout of one’s environment • example- after exploring a maze, rats act as if they have learned a cognitive map of it • Latent Learning • learning that occurs, but is not apparent until there is an incentive to demonstrate it

  38. Cognition and Operant Conditioning • Overjustification Effect • the effect of promising a reward for doing what one already likes to do • the person may now see the reward, rather than intrinsic interest, as the motivation for performing the task

  39. Latent Learning Average errors 32 30 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Days

  40. Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning The Response Involuntary, automatic “Voluntary,” operates on environment Acquisition Associating events; Associating response with a CS announces UCS. Consequence (reinforcer or punisher). Cognitive Subjects develop expectation Subjects develop expectation that processes that CS signals the arrival of a response will be reinforced or UCS. Punished; they also exhibit latent learning, without reinforcement Biological Natural predispositions Organisms best learn behaviors predispositions contain what stimuli and similar to their natural behaviors; responses can easily be unnatural behaviors instinctively associated. drift back toward natural ones. Operant vs Classical Conditioning Extinction CR decreases when CS is Responding decreases when repeatedly presented alone. reinforcement stops.

  41. Observational Learning • Observational Learning • learning by observing and imitating others • Modeling • process of observing and imitating behavior • Prosocial Behavior • positive, constructive, helpful behavior • opposite of antisocial behavior

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