1 / 19

Operant Conditioning

Operant Conditioning. Reward. Punishment. Reinforcement/Punishment. Four Possible Consequences There are four possible consequences to any behavior. They are:

tbower
Download Presentation

Operant Conditioning

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. Operant Conditioning Reward Punishment

  2. Reinforcement/Punishment

  3. Four Possible Consequences There are four possible consequences to any behavior. They are: Something Good can start or be presented PR;Something Good can end or be taken away NP;Something Bad can start or be presented PP;Something Bad can end or be taken away NR.

  4. Something Good can start or be presented, so behavior increases = Positive Reinforcement (R+) Something Good can end or be taken away, so behavior decreases = Negative Punishment (P-) Something Bad can start or be presented, so behavior decreases = Positive Punishment (P+) Something Bad can end or be taken away, so behavior increases = Negative Reinforcement (R-)

  5. Operant Conditioning

  6. Negative reinforcement – Active Avoidance

  7. Dennis says it all…….. Dennis, if you don’t stop bothering Mr. Wilson, you can’t listen to MTV=NP

  8. HOW COMPLEX BEHAVIORSARE LEARNED • Successive approximation/shaping = reinforcing behaviors as they come to approximate the desired behavior • Superstitious Behavior = when persistent behaviors are reinforced coincidentally rather than functionally

  9. .5

  10. Learned Helplessness Prevent a dog from escaping electric shocks, and it will stop trying to get away. Applications for abused women and children

  11. Learned Helplessness Paradigm Seligman “Triadic” Design Phase 1 Phase 2 Group A: Escapable Shock Group B: Yoked Inescapable Shock Group C: Exposure to apparatus only Escape/Avoidance training (For Group A shock can be terminated by rotating a wheel.)

  12. Learned Helplessness – Seligman, Peterson, et al. • Dogs exposed to unavoidable shocks • Following exposure, when placed in a situation where they can now jump to avoid the shock, they fail to make the escape response. • Learned helplessness occurs when one perceives that one’s actions (e.g., working hard) does not lead to the expected outcome (e.g., high grade).

  13. Possible Explanations • Learned Helplessness: Organisms learn that their behavior is ineffectual • Poverty of activity: inescapable shock reduces the variability in behavior that is so crucial for operant conditioning • Inattention: animals stop attending to their own behavior

  14. Battered Spouse Syndrome • Learned helplessness • Victim Mentality • Increased dependency on abuser

  15. Psychological: Behavioral Results • Learned Helplessness: • Seligman’s experiments with rats and dogs • Learned helplessness in humans linked with attributions of a lack of control after experiences of being in an impotent position Environment which lacks positive reinforcement > reduction in activities and withdrawal

  16. Selye’s General Adaptation Syndrome (1956, 1976, 1985) Resistance • Arousal high as body tries defend and adapt. Exhaustion • Limited physical resources; resistance to disease collapses; death Alarm Reaction • Fight or flight P If stress continues ….

  17. Operant Conditioning Interval Ratio Fixed Variable

More Related