Title: Preparedness
1Preparedness
- Aims
- Know what is meant by preparedness, instinctive
drift, equipotential - Be able to contrast traditional learning with
prepared learning - Be capable of describing Garcia Koelling and
Öhman's research - Consider how to test the notion of preparedness
- Know what is meant by evolutionary memory, fear
responses, adapative conservativism - be able to evaluate factors that may contribute
to phenomena observed with evolutionary memories - Be capable of describing experiments on modelling
- Appreciate some of the limitations of
preparedness as a concept.
2Neurotic behaviour
- Maladaptive behaviours accompanied by strong,
irrelevant and persistent emotions, occurring in
full awareness of their maladaptive and
irrational nature. - Watson Raynor (1920) learning theory.
- Albert white rat. loud noise fear rat other
furry. - Watson's (CS) with the loud noise (UCS). furry
object fear (CR).
3Problems for traditional theories of learning
- Single trial learning -common with neurosis, not
in lab. - Time relations - strict in lab. Shown not to be
important elsewhere. - Equipotential of learning - doesn't exist.
evidence of belongingness - Extinction - is slow in neurosis
- Traumatic UCS not always present
- no memory of traumatic events causing the
neurosis - Pain may not be involved in neurosis
- Different neurosis have characteristic ages of
onset - Enhancement of CR when CS is presented alone can
occur - Replication - individual differences exist
4Unprepared Learning
- It often takes many trials to accomplish an
association (1). - actual timing of the CS and UCS is important.
(trace conditioning)(2) - Hull, Rescorla Wagner all features of all the
stimuli present on a conditioning trial are
reinforced. equipotential to become associated.
(3) - If the CS is presented alone without the UCS then
this is an occasion for extinction (l 0) and so
the strength of the connection is diminished. (4)
5Little Albert
- Little Albert a few acquisition trial not many.
- time relations
- of all the stimuli present at the time of the UCS
only furry object conditioned to - not phobic towards radiators, carpets or tables,
but animals. belongingness - phobic reaction extinguish?
- Seligman, Eysenck H, and Mineka
6Prepared learning
- taste aversions,
- Garcia Koelling (1966)
- rats flavoured drinks light and click. then sick
avoid the flavoured drink no association to the
noise and lights. -
7Prepared learning
X-ray
shock
8Prepared learning
R1increase gsr
CS1 non fear CS2 fear
US1 shock
- acquisition very fast, time relations were
unsatisfactory, extinction was very slow.
9Preparedness
- Seligman biological constraints.
- some learning is easier (prepared) other
(unprepared) and some difficult to ever achieve
(contraprepared). - partially determined by biological factors.
evolutionary memory - being sick with things that have been eaten and
drunk - dangerous predators information should be quickly
gathered to learn - Breland Breland (1961) contraprepared
instinctive drift.
10Fear Conditioning
- Öhman his colleagues accept the notion of
preparedness. Phobias are misapplied prepared
learning. sensible to be prepared to fear snakes
and spiders - phobias for animals occur at younger ages, when
predators dangerous. a few people who couldn't
remember a painful experience - Öhman preparedness privileged processing of
prepared stimuli (i.e.. automatic way, below
conscious awareness, and are resistant to
backward masking effects)
11Fear related stimuli
- learning to fear related stimuli is different to
the learning of other stimuli. - fear related (snakes, spiders etc.) vs. not fear
related (umbrellas, flowers). - The pictures paired with shocks. measuring
GSRlearning of the association was quicker for
the fear related objects. presenting the CS
alone, extinction should be slower for the fear
Öhman found good support for slow extinction.
12PY503 Minekas contribution
- Mineka relevant to recall of the episodes
- Failure to recall a painful incident.
- causes of preparedness.
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
13Learning through modelling
- Evolutionary Memories. acquiring phobias a
special type of learning. - controlling for differences in the size of the CR
- phylogenetic vs. ontogenetic processes in
learning. - captured monkeys snakes video'd fear reactions
- laboratory reared monkeys no fear to snakes.,
- videos of a calm or fearful monkey
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
14Learning through modelling
- Underneath monkey on a screen picture toy snake
or flower.
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
15phylogenetic
- Initially equal toy snake or flower. Phylogenetic
- model fear with the snake long lasting
effects prepared learning. - learn through observation cf. having a bad
experience - animal vs. non animal crocodile vs. a rabbit.
- Evolutionary memories fear is based on
prototypical fear early mammals and dominant
reptilian (dinosaur) species. - fear conditioned to crocodile pictures, not
rabbits.
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
16salience
- Do fear irrelevant stimuli have low salience.
- Used stim as cues for food rewards- evidence was
generally that the stimuli were of equal
salience. - concludes snakes are selectively associable
aversive outcomes. - Are fear representation prototypes hard wired or
do phobic animals share perceptual
characteristics?
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
17Overgeneralisation of Fear
- Gradient flattening. Riccio et al. found that
over time the gradient around CS flattens.
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
- UCS specifics forgotten. Hendersen et al
- Disinhibitors soon forgotten.
- Fear extinction context specific. (Bouton et al.)
18Adaptive conservatism and biases
- conservatism adaptive for aversive events.
- better to err on the side of caution even at the
cost of resources (physical and emotional). - Attentional bias stroop task show that spider
phobics treat phobic words differently to non
phobic words. - Memory bias eg. poor recall of large spiders
because material has not been adequately
elaborated. - Frequency overestimates.-gt overestimate the
frequency of bad events relative to good.
Evolutionary memories and emotional processing
19Preparedness as a concept
- definition is circular.
- What is preparedness?
propensity to learning fast because of biology
- no satisfactory way of defining what is
biologically significant. - It is possible to get quick acquisition and slow
extinction if the parameters are set in a
particular way even in Rescorla Wagner's
formulation (e.g. make a and b 1 gives one
trial learning, and adjusting the salience of the
CS would affect the learning and extinction
rate).
20Preparedness - problems
- evolutionary memories or ontogenetic i.e. in the
lifetime of the individual. - e.g. Jacobs Nadel Sullivan visual properties of
stimuli become associated with sickness rather
than the olfactory aspects. - McNally reviewed the research on preparedness no
evidence that acquisition was faster, little
evidence that there was a lack of rationality,
plenty of evidence that extinction was slower,
for prepared (fear related) .