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The Psychology of Learning and Behavior

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Process- change that occurs as a result of an organisms experience. ... Russian physiologist and Nobel laureate, best known for his studies of reflex behavior. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Psychology of Learning and Behavior


1
The Psychology of Learning and Behavior
  • Chapter 1

2
Learning
  • Process- change that occurs as a result of an
    organisms experience.
  • Acquisition phase of acquiring a new skill.
  • Product- long-term changes in an individuals
    behavior that result from a learning experience.
  • Performance- stable behavioral patterns or
    steady-state behavioral occur following a
    period of acquisition.

3
Scientific Approach to the Study of Behavior
  • What is science?
  • Methods and procedures used to investigate a
    phenomenon Scientific Method
  • Search for general principals or laws with wide
    applicability.

4
Scientific Laws
  • forcemass x acceleration
  • d16t2

5
Laws of Behavior
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6
Science of Behavior
  • Learning - acquisition, maintenance, and change
    of an organisms behavior as a result of lifetime
    events.
  • Control- humans are concerned with regulating the
    behavior of others.
  • Behavior Theory- all behavior is due to complex
    interactions between genetic influence and
    environmental experience.

7
Experimental Analysis of Behavior
  • A natural science approach to understanding
    behavior regulation (determinism)
  • Controlling and changing the factors affecting
    the behavior of organisms.
  • Specifying the basic processes and principles the
    regulate behavior.
  • Experiments to test these notions.

8
Behavioral Analysis
  • General Scientific Approach
  • Assumptions about how to study behavior
  • Techniques to carry out the analysis
  • A systematic body of knowledge
  • Practical implications for society and culture

9
Behavior Analysis
  • A comprehensive approach to study of the behavior
    of organisms
  • Discovery of laws and principals that govern
    behavior.
  • Extension of these principals across species
    (generality).
  • Development of an applied technology.

10
Applied Behavioral Analysis
  • Use of behavioral principals to solve practical
    problems.
  • Too many glasses
  • Use of seats belts
  • Speeding
  • Stopping at red lights

11
Evolution of Conditioning
  • Natural selection favored individuals whose
    behavior could be conditioned.
  • Capacity for conditioning is inherited.
  • Response selection by consequences.
  • Operant behavior naturally varies in form and
    frequency

12
Culture and Behavior Analysis
  • Contemporary behavior analysis behavior of
    individuals to
  • ideals and values of society
  • regulation of human conduct
  • individual behavior is acquired, maintained, and
    changed through interactions with others

13
Fundamental Processes of Learning
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Reflexes, elicited behavior, environmental events
    acquire control of behavior
  • Operant Conditioning
  • More complex behaviors, emitted, modified by
    consequences
  • Social Learning
  • Learning from observations

14
Historical Background
  • Nativist (nature) vs Empericist (nuture)
  • Are a persons characteristics mostly inborn or
    learned?

15
Historical Background
  • Plato (427-347)
  • Plato was chiefly interested in moral philosophy
    and despised natural philosophy (that is,
    science) as an inferior and unworthy sort of
    knowledge.
  • Believed we are born with complete knowledge
    within our soul.
  • Learning a process of inner reflection to
    discover the knowledge within us.

16
History
  • Aristole (384-322)
  • Knowledge acquired through experience.
  • Four Laws of Association
  • Law of similarity
  • Law of Contrast
  • Law of Contiguity
  • Law of Frequency

17
History
  • Descartes- (1596-1650)
  • Mind body dualism
  • Reflexes and behavior controlled by the mind.
  • Dualistic notion of human behavior suggested at
    least some components of behavior could be
    scientifically investigated.

18
British Empiricists
  • Almost all knowledge is a function of experience
  • John Locke (1632-1704) tabula rasa
  • John Locke was an Oxford scholar, medical
    researcher and physician, political operative,
    and economist, as well as being one of the great
    philosophers of the late seventeenth and early
    eighteenth century. His monumental Essay
    Concerning Human Understanding aims to determine
    the limits of human understanding.
  • In regard to natural substances we can know only
    the appearances and not the underlying realities
    which produce those appearances.

19
Structuralism
  • Structure of mind can be assessed by
    identification of basic elements through logical
    reasoning and subjective examination of our own
    experiences.
  • Introspection- describe conscious thoughts,
    emotions, sensory experiences
  • Edward Titchener (1867-1927)

20
Functionalism
  • William James (1842-1910)
  • Psychology study of adaptive processes

21
B.F. Skinner (1904-1990)
  • American psychologist B. F.Skinner became famous
    for his pioneering research on learning and
    behavior. During his 60-year career, Skinner
    discovered important principles of
    operant conditioning, a type of learning that
    involves reinforcement and punishment.
    A strict behaviorist, Skinner believed that
    operant conditioning could explain even the most
    complex of human behaviors.

22
Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
  • Russian physiologist and Nobel laureate, best
    known for his studies of reflex behavior. He was
    born in Ryazan', and educated at the University
    of Saint Petersburg and at the Military Medical
    Academy, St. Petersburg from 1884 to 1886 he
    studied in Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland) and
    Leipzig, Germany. Before the Russian Revolution
    he served as director of the department of
    physiology at the Institute of Experimental
    Medicine (part of the present Academy of Medical
    Sciences), St. Petersburg, and professor of
    medicine at the Military Medical Academy. In
    spite of his opposition to Communism, Pavlov
    was allowed to continue his research in a
    laboratory built by the Soviet Government in
    1935. Pavlov is noted for his pioneer work in the
    physiology of the heart, nervous system, and
    digestive system. His most famous experiments,
    begun in 1889, demonstrated the conditioned and
    unconditioned reflexes in dogs, and they had an
    influence on the development of

23
Pavlov
  • Making Her Salivate for You

24
John Watson (1878-1958)
  • American psychologist, born in Greenville,
    South Carolina, and educated at Furman
    University and the University of Chicago. From
    1908 to 1920 he was professor of psychology and
    director of the psychological laboratory at
    Johns Hopkins University. Watson is noted as
    the founder and leading exponent of the school of
    psychology known as behaviorism, which restricts
    psychology to the study of objectively observable
    behavior and explains behavior in terms of
    stimulus and response. His writings include
    Animal Education (1903), Behavior (1914),
    Behaviorism (1925 revised ed., 1930), and
    Psychological Care of Infant and Child (1928).

25
Watson
26
Edward Thorndike (1874-1949)
  • American psychologist and educator, born in
    Williamsburg, Massachusetts, and educated at
    Wesleyan, Harvard, and Columbia universities.
    Thorndike joined the psychology faculty at
    Teachers College of Columbia University in
    1899, where he served as adjunct professor of
    educational psychology from 1901 to 1904 and as
    professor of psychology from 1904 until his
    retirement in 1940. From 1922 to 1940 he also
    was director of the psychology division of the
    Institute of Educational Research at Teachers
    College.
  • By using trial-and-error experiments with
    animals, Thorndike formulated his so-called law
    of effectthe more satisfying the result of a
    particular action, the better that action is
    learnedand applied it to the development of
    special teaching techniques for use in the
    classroom. He is particularly known for his
    construction of various intelligence and aptitude
    tests and for his repudiation of the belief that
    such primarily intellectual subjects as languages
    and mathematics discipline the mind.

27
Thorndike
  • Thorndike's learning theory can be summarized as
    follows
  • The law of effect - responses followed by a
    reward will strengthen the response
  • The law of readiness - chaining a discrete
    responses to achieve a goal
  • The law of exercise - associations are
    strengthened with practice, weakened without it,
    and can be diminished with failure or punishment.

28
Assumptions of a Science of Behavior
  • Determinism
  • Behavior is lawful

29
Scientific Theories
  • Causality- relationship between cause and effect
  • Independent variable- cause
  • Dependent variable- effect
  • Intervening variable- theoretical concepts
  • Syntax- rules for measurement and relationship

30
Judging Scientific Theories
  • Testability (falsifiability)
  • Simplicity
  • Generality
  • Fruitfulness
  • Agreement with the data

31
Review of Research Methods
  • Anecdotes or Case Histories
  • Biased sample
  • Observational Techniques
  • Experimental Techniques

32
Behaviorism versus Cognitive
  • Heavy reliance on non-human subjects
  • Emphasis on external events
  • Reluctance to speculate about processes inside
    the organism

33
Use of Animal Subjects
  • Subject expectancy reduced
  • Control of immediate and past history
  • Convenience

34
Criticisms and Concerns
  • Language and other skills
  • Generality
  • Ethics

35
External Events
  • Radical Behaviorism/Contemporary behavior
    analysis
  • The private world- thinking and feeling are
    activities of the organism they are behaviors not
    the cause of behavior.
  • thinking - low probability of action, weak
    control of behavior by a stimulus.
  • covert behavior increases the effectiveness of
    practical action
  • private behavior regulated by specific features
    of the environment.
  • Self-reports of feelings and other covert
    behavior such as intentions are unreliable.

36
Determinism
  • Determinism- philosophical position all events of
    the world result from physical causes that can be
    discovered.
  • Free Will- nonphysical entity can direct human
    behavior.
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