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Observational Learning

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Vicarious conditioning- being conditioned indirectly by virtue of watching ... Remembering your dog, and then switching to thoughts of hot-dogs. repression ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Observational Learning


1
  • Observational Learning
  • Albert Bandura (1977,1986)
  • Observational Learning
  • Vicarious conditioning- being conditioned
    indirectly by virtue of watching anothers
    conditioning (your friend gets shocked by a penny
    in the socket, so you dont do it)
  • Key issues
  • Attention
  • Retention (can you remember everything)
  • Reproduction
  • Motivation
  • Acquisition vs. Performance
  • May acquire a response but reinforcement will
    affect whether you perform that response

2
  • Expectancies and Conditioning
  • Cognitive-social theory argues that we form
    expectancies about the consequences of our
    behaviors
  • These expectancies determine what is rewarding
  • Locus of control refers to general expectancy as
    to whether fate does or does not determine
    outcomes in life
  • Internal locus believe that their actions
    determine their fate
  • External locus believe that their lives are
    governed by forces outside their control

3
  • Neural Basis for Learning
  • Neural plasticity- capacity for neurons to change
    the way they function as a consequence of
    experience
  • Your brain actually changes w/ experience
  • Studied in Aplysia (some sort of fish-like
    animal)- only 20,000 neurons, simple behavior
  • Pre-synaptic facilitation
  • Long-term Potentiation

4
  • Animal Learning Issues
  • Cognitive map
  • If you have animals in a maze, theyre easier to
    train if you let them explore and build a map of
    the maze in their head
  • Fill niche
  • Clark nutcrackers- cache
  • Birds figure out ways to crack nuts, like
    dropping them in front of cars
  • Zebra Finches-song
  • Theyll imitate songs they here, even from the
    television
  • Concepts-Herrnstein
  • Pigeons-trees
  • Try to get pigeons to peck when they see pictures
    of trees
  • Pecked at the non tree pictures, but only because
    there were tree-like cues (leaves, special
    shadows, etc)
  • They were actually better than the people who
    made the test!

5
  • MEMORY

6
  • Memory
  • Memory is
  • A blanket label for a large number of processes
    that work together to create a bridge between our
    past and our present

7
  • Multiple forms of Memory
  • Memory for short periods of time seems to be
    different than memory for longer periods of time
  • Brain damage can disrupt some kinds of memory but
    leave other kinds unaffected
  • Some things seem easy to remember and some things
    really dificult

8
  • Human Memory Basic Questions
  • How does information get put into memory?
  • Encoding
  • How is information maintained in memory?
  • storage
  • How is information pulled back out of memory?
  • retrieval

9
  • Encoding getting information into memory
  • The role of attention
  • Focusing awareness
  • Selective attention selection of input
  • Filtering early or late?
  • We see tons of information like shirt colors, etc
    but filter out stuff thats not important

10
  • Encoding in Long-term memory
  • Requires attention
  • Filter? early or late selection?
  • Cocktail party phenomenon
  • You can remember things you dont pay attention
    to
  • If youre at a party paying attention to a
    discussion, you might randomly hear your name
    come up in a conversation that you werent paying
    attention to
  • You can hear that other conversation, youre just
    filtering it out until something important comes
    up.
  • Levels of processing (shallow to deep)
  • Structural encoding ? length or print of words
  • Phonemic encoding ? what a word sounds like
  • Semantic encoding ? the meaning of verbal input
  • Deeper encoding better memory
  • Processing time ! depth of processing

11
  • Depth of encoding
  • See figure A

12
  • Encoding Issues
  • Encoding specificity principle idea that ease of
    retrieval of a memory depends on match of
    encoding with retrieval
  • Poor recall if shallow learning is examined using
    a deep processing technique
  • Student who reads multiple choice items in test
    prep book and then takes an essay exam will
    likely not do very well
  • Spacing of learning is important
  • Spaced learning leads to better recall of
    information

13
  • Encoding Specificity
  • What kinds of things serve as cues?
  • Godden Baddely (1975) (?not important)
  • Memory capacity of deep sea divers
  • Learn lists of words
  • On the beach
  • Under 15 feet of water
  • Tested
  • On the beach
  • Under 15 feet of water
  • Each did best in the environment they studied in
  • You perform best in the same place you learned in

14
  • State Dependency
  • Recall better when individuals are in the same
    emotional and physical state as they were in
    during learning.
  • If taking Caffeine while studying, should have
    caffeine while taking test

15
  • Storage maintaining information in memory
  • Analogy information storage in computers
    information storage in human memory
  • Information-processing theories
  • Subdivide memory into 3 different stores
  • Sensory, short-term, long-term

16
  • Standard Memory Model
  • This metaphor views the mind as a computer
  • Model assumes that memory consists of 3 stores
  • See figure B in notes

17
  • Sensory Registers
  • Brief preservation of information in original
    sensory form
  • Sensory registers
  • Iconic (Visual)
  • Echoic (auditory)
  • Auditory/visual- approximately ΒΌ second
  • George Sperling (1960)
  • Classic experiment on visual sensory store

18
  • Short term memory (STM)
  • Limited capacity- magical number 7 plus or minus
    2
  • Chunking- grouping familiar stimuli for storage
    as a single unit (telephone numbers are chunked
    into 3 and 4 number series, much easier to
    remember this way
  • Limited duration- about 15-30 seconds without
    rehearsal
  • Rehearsal- the process of repetitively
    verbalizing or thinking about the information
    (you can make this 30 second process last
    forever)
  • Maintenance information is repeated
  • Elaborative information is related to other
    knowledge from long term memory

19
  • Short-term memory as working memory
  • STM not limited to phonemic encoding
  • Loss of information not only due to decay
  • Baddeley (1986) 3 components of working memory
  • Phonological rehearsal loop
  • Visuospatial sketchpad
  • Central executive

20
  • Working memory
  • Working memory is temporary storage and
    processing of information used to
  • Solve problems
  • Respond to environmental demands
  • Achieve goals
  • Working memory may consist of three modules
  • Visual memory store (visuospatial sketchpad)
  • Verbal memory store (Phonological rehearsal)
  • Executive control system (central executive)

21
  • Working memory stores
  • Visual memory store
  • A temporary image (20-30 sec) that provides
    information about the location and nature of
    objects
  • Verbal memory store
  • Involves storage of verbal items
  • Limited capacity
  • Shallow items are processed in order of
    presentation and are subject to interference
  • Central executive
  • The manager
  • Working memory stores are independent
  • Brain damage may alter visual but not verbal
    (they are very seperable)

22
  • Phonolgical loop
  • Word length effect longer words take longer to
    say, shorter memory span because it takes up more
    of that short term memory span just to recite
  • Also, memory span for 2 syllable, long words
    (e.g., furlough) is less than for 2 syllable
    short words (e.g., bishop)

23
  • Visuospatial Memory
  • Not quite as nicely developed
  • Some interesting analogies with the phonological
    loop but just not much research
  • Definitely seems to be something different

24
  • Long term memory
  • LTM refers to the representations of facts,
    images, actions and skills that may persist over
    a lifetime
  • LTM involves retrieval of information
  • LTM is theoretically limitless in capacity
  • The serial position curve supports the existence
    of STM versus LTM
  • Primacy effect reflects LTM
  • Recency effect reflects STM

25
  • Long-term memory unlimited capacity
  • Permanent storage?
  • Flashbulb memories
  • Recall through hypnosis
  • Debate are STM and LTM really different?
  • Phonemic vs semantic encoding
  • Decay vs interference based forgetting

26
  • Varieties of Long term memory
  • Explicit or declarative memory- conscious
    retrieval of information
  • Semantic generic knowledge of facts like shoe
    size or mothers names
  • Episodic memories of specific events
  • Autobiographical
  • Recall vs recognition
  • Implicit or non-declarative memory skills,
    conditioned learning, and associative memory
  • Procedural memory for skills (remembering how to
    ride a bike)

27
  • Temporal Distinctions in Memory
  • Retention of information over short periods of
    time depends on specific brain regions-
    immediately, it lights up
  • Hippocampus and surrounding cortex
  • Over time, hippocampus appears to become less
    important
  • Memories become more dependent on cortical areas,
    less on hippocampal regions

28
  • Damage to hippocampus and associated areas
  • Hippocampus nearby areas
  • Quick acquisition of information
  • Cant store the information forever
  • Cortical areas
  • Slow acquisition of information
  • Much longer term storage
  • In other words, hippocampus is an important
    starting place for memory

29
  • Mnemonics
  • Shortcuts to help remember
  • Its more information to have to remember, but it
    still helps

30
  • How is Knowledge Represented and Organized in
    Memory?
  • Clustering and conceptual hierarchies
  • Schemes and scripts- shortcuts we make
  • Semantic networks
  • Connectionist networks and PDP models

31
  • Schemas
  • Organized clusters of knowledge about events or
    objects based on experience.
  • How to act in a nice restaurant
  • Sub-schemas (eg which silverware to use, what to
    wear, how to eat, etc)
  • How to drive a car
  • What to expect if you throw a tennis ball
  • Eg Manual driver trying to shift when he first
    gets in an automatic- the shifting is a schema

32
  • Semantic Networks
  • LTM is organized in clusters of information that
    are related in meaning
  • The network is composed of interconnected nodes
  • A node may contain thoughts, images, smells,
    emotions, or any other information
  • Pathways lines connecting the concepts
  • Length egree of association between 2 things
  • Shorter pathways stronger associations
  • Longer pathways weaker associations

33
  • Connectionist or PDP models
  • Interconnected computational network composed of
    nodes
  • Nodes may be interactive, excitatory, or
    inhibitory
  • Particular patterns of activation across a
    network specific memories
  • More general in scope (applies to perception,
    learning, PS)
  • Strengths
  • Plausible
  • Parallel rather than serial processing

34
  • Retrieval getting information out of memory
  • The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon- a failure in
    retrieval
  • Retrieval cues
  • Recalling an event
  • Context cues
  • Reconstructing memories
  • Misinformation effect
  • Source monitoring, reality monitoring

35
  • Forgetting when memory lapses
  • Retention- the proportion of material retained
  • Recall
  • Recognition
  • relearning
  • Ebbinghauss forgeting curve

36
  • Forgetting
  • Forgetting refers to the inability to recall
    previously learned information
  • Ebbinghaus documented the rate of forgetting of
    information
  • Initial rate of forgetting is high and then
    trails off
  • See figure C in notes

37
  • Why do we forget?
  • Ineffective encoding
  • Decay theory
  • Memory is like a fading neural trace that is
    weakened with disuse
  • Interference theory conflict between new and old
    memories (pluto is a planet and then pluto is
    not a planet!)
  • Proactive old memories interfere with recall of
    new information
  • Retroactive new memories interfere with recall
    of old information
  • Motivated forgetting implies that forgetting can
    avoid painful memories (eg, repressed memories)
  • Your brain can restrict access to information it
    doesnt like, but you cant really do it actively

38
  • Retrieval failure
  • Encoding Specificity
  • Transfer-appropriate processing
  • Remembering your dog, and then switching to
    thoughts of hot-dogs
  • repression
  • Authenticity of repressed memories?
  • Memory illusions
  • controversy

39
  • amnesia
  • Retrograde amnesia- loss of memories for events
    that occurred prior to onset of amnesia
  • Anterograde amnesia loss of memories for events
    that occurred after the onset of amnesia
  • H.M.- most well known own patient- epileptic
  • They removed his hippocampus, he couldnt store
    new memories
  • He could sill learn new skills
  • Wouldnt remember the task (eg basketball), but
    after several sessions would be like wow Im
    really good at this!

40
  • Proactive interference
  • Previous items interfere with current memory set
  • Previous items are confused with current memory
    set, and they are more likely to be recalled.
  • Reduce interference by making items more
    distinct?

41
  • Release from Proactive Interference
  • Wickens (1972)
  • Presented fruits for first 3 trials
  • Either switch (75) or continue with same
  • Big increase in performance on 4th trial with
    switch
  • Amount of increase inversely related to
    similarity

42
  • What does all of this research suggest?
  • Similarity is bad- causes interference
  • Distinctiveness helps make individual memories
    easier to recall

43
  • Are there multiple memory systems?
  • Implicit vs explicit
  • Declarative vs procedural
  • Semantic vs episodic
  • Prospective vs retrospective

44
  • Prospective vs retrospective memory
  • Prospective- remembering to perform actions in
    the future
  • Factors influencing success
  • Habitual vs infrequent tasks
  • Event-based vs. time-based tasks
  • Retrospective memory- remembering events from the
    past or previously learned information
  • Whats the name o your 1st grade teacher, 1st
    boyfriend/girlfriend?
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