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Chapter 6: Behaviorism

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Title: Chapter 6: Behaviorism


1
Chapter 6 Behaviorism
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Observational Learning

2
Behaviorism
  • Dominated Psychology in the first half of the
    20th Century.
  • Dealt with behavior only, not mental processes.

3
Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • 1849-1936
  • Russian physician/ neurophysiologist
  • Nobel Prize, 1904
  • studied digestive secretions

4
Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning
  • Pavlovs device for recording salivation

5
Pavlovs Apparatus for Studying Classical
Conditioning in Dogs
6
Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning Respondent
Behavior
  • Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
  • stimulus that unconditionally- naturally and
    automatically - triggers a response
  • Unconditioned Response (UCR)
  • unlearned, naturally occurring response to the
    unconditioned stimulus
  • salivation when food is in the mouth

7
Classical Conditioning Respondent Behavior
  • learning in which a neutral stimulus acquires the
    capacity to elicit a response after being paired
    with another stimulus that naturally elicits that
    response
  • Unconditioned response (UCR) automatic response
    to a stimulus
  • Unconditioned stimulus (UCS) naturally and
    automatically elicits a response
  • Conditioned response (CR) learned response to a
    previously neutral stimulus
  • Conditioned stimulus (CS) after repeated
    pairings with UCS, elicits the same response

8
Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning Respondent
Behavior
  • Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
  • originally 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

9
Pavlovs Classic Experiment
10
Classical or Pavlovian Conditioning
11
Classical Conditioning
12
Classic Conditioning Allows Animals to Learn to
Predict Events
  • Learning theorists once believed that the
    learning in classical conditioning is
    unintentional and automatic (classic
    behaviorism).
  • Most contemporary learning theorists now believe
    classical conditioning involves quite a bit of
    mindfulness because, (through the conditioning
    process) humans and other animals are learning to
    reliably predict upcoming events.

13
Classic Conditioning Allows Animals to Learn to
Predict Events
  • Psychologists once believed that the key to
    acquiring a conditioned response was the sheer
    number of CS-UCS pairings.
  • However, the order and timing of CS-UCS pairings
    is also very important because it provides
    valuable information about the upcoming
    occurrence of the unconditioned stimulus.

14
Utility Avoiding a Predators Attack through
Classical ConditioningStep 1
15
Avoiding a Predators Attack through Classical
ConditioningStep 2
16
Avoiding a Predators Attack through Classical
ConditioningStep 3
17
Stages in Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning
  • Acquisition
  • the initial stage of learning, during which a
    response is established and gradually
    strengthened
  • the phase associating a neutral stimulus with an
    unconditioned stimulus

18
Stages in Classical (Pavlovian) Conditioning
  • Extinction gradual weakening and disappearance
    of the conditioned response
  • Spontaneous recovery reappearance of an
    extinguished response after a period of
    nonexposure to the conditioned stimulus

19
After Acquisition, Other Stimuli Can Produce the
Conditioned Response
  • Stimulus generalization tendency for a
    conditioned response to be elicited by stimuli
    similar to the conditioned stimulus

20
Generalization
21
Animals Differ in What Responses Can Be
Classically Conditioned
  • Early learning theorists assumed that the
    principles of conditioning were similar across
    all species, but subsequent research indicates
    that this assumption is incorrect.
  • Animals often differ in what responses can be
    conditioned.
  • In some animals, some responses can be
    conditioned much more readily to certain stimuli
    than to others.
  • An animals biology steers it toward certain
    kinds of conditioning.

22
Taste aversion study by Garcia and Koelling
  • Rats learned to avoid a light-noise combination
    when it was paired with electric shock, but not
    when it was followed by X rays that made them
    nauseous.
  • In contrast, rats quickly learned to avoid
    flavored water when it was followed by X rays,
    but they did not readily acquire an aversion to
    this same water when it was followed by shock.
  • It is also adaptive that in taste aversion,
    strong conditioning develops despite the long
    delay between the CS (the taste) and the UCS (the
    nausea).

23
Biological Constraints on Taste Aversion in Rats
24
Classically Conditioned Phobias
  • Phobias exaggerated and irrational fears of
    objects or situations
  • Such intense fear reactions often develop through
    classical conditioning.
  • We can develop a phobia toward anything, but some
    objects (snakes) or situations elicit phobic
    reactions more easily than others.

25
Nausea Conditioning among Cancer Patients
26
Little Alberts Fear Conditioning
27
John B. Watson Famous Behaviorist
  • Conditioned Emotional Responding
  • Extreme Nurture (learning) position
  • Fear learned through stimulus generalization?
  • Emotion-evoking Advertising
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