Title: PSYCHOLOGY 11002 General Psychology
1PSYCHOLOGY 110-02General Psychology
- University of Southern Mississippi
- Department of Psychology
- Dr. David J. Echevarria, PhD
- Spring 2008
- david.echevarria_at_usm.edu
- www.usm.edu/neurolab
Chapter 6 Learning
2Chapter 6 Learning
3Classical Conditioning
- Ivan Pavlov
- Terminology
- Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
- Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
- Unconditioned Response (UCR)
- Conditioned Response (CR)
4Figure 6.1 Classical conditioning apparatus
5Figure 6.2 The sequence of events in classical
conditioning
6Figure 6.3 Classical conditioning of a fear
response
7Conditioned taste aversion
Usually this is a learned reaction to a food or
drink that has previously made us sick This
type of learning has served us well from the
perspective of evolution Very often we only
have to learn this lesson once
8Conditioned taste aversion
9Classical Conditioning More Terminology
- Trial pairing of UCS and CS
- Acquisition initial stage in learning
- Stimulus contiguity occurring together in time
and space
10Classical Conditioning More Terminology
- 3 types of Classical Conditioning
- Simultaneous conditioning CS and UCS begin and
end together - Short-delayed conditioning CS begins just before
the UCS, end together - Trace conditioning CS begins and ends before UCS
is presented
11Processes in Classical Conditioning
- Extinction
- Spontaneous Recovery
- Stimulus Generalization
- Discrimination
- Higher-order conditioning
12Figure 6.7 Acquisition, extinction, and
spontaneous recovery
13Figure 6.10 Higher-order conditioning
14Operant Conditioningor Instrumental Learning
- Edward L. Thorndike (1913) the law of effect
- B.F. Skinner (1953) principle of reinforcement
- Operant chamber
- Emission of response
- Reinforcement contingencies
- Cumulative recorder
15Figure 6.12 Reinforcement in operant conditioning
16Figure 6.13 Skinner box and cumulative recorder
17Basic Processes in Operant Conditioning
- Acquisition
- Shaping
- Extinction
- Stimulus Control
- Generalization
- Discrimination
18Figure 6.14 A graphic portrayal of operant
responding
19Table 6.1 Comparison of Basic Processes in
Classical and Operant Conditioning
20ReinforcementConsequences that Strengthen
Responses
- Primary Reinforcers
- Satisfy biological needs
- Secondary Reinforcers
- Conditioned reinforcement
21Schedules of Reinforcement
- Continuous reinforcement
- Intermittent (partial) reinforcement
- Ratio schedules
- Fixed
- Variable
- Interval schedules
- Fixed
- Variable
22Figure 6.17 Schedules of reinforcement and
patterns of response
23ConsequencesReinforcement and Punishment
- Increasing a response
- Positive reinforcement response followed by
rewarding stimulus - Negative reinforcement response followed by
removal of an aversive stimulus - Escape learning
- Avoidance learning
- Decreasing a response
- Punishment
- Problems with punishment
24Figure 6.18 Positive reinforcement versus
negative reinforcement
25Figure 6.19 Escape and avoidance learning
26Figure 6.20 Comparison of negative reinforcement
and punishment
27Changes in Our Understandingof Conditioning
- Biological Constraints on Conditioning
- Instinctive Drift
- Conditioned Taste Aversion
- Preparedness and Phobias
- Cognitive Influences on Conditioning
- Signal relations
- Response-outcome relations
- Evolutionary Perspectives on learning
28Figure 6.22 Conditioned taste aversion
29Observational Learning Basic Processes
- Albert Bandura (1977, 1986)
- Observational learning
- Vicarious conditioning
- 4 key processes
- attention
- retention
- reproduction
- motivation
- acquisition vs. performance
30Figure 6.25 Observational learning