Title: Chapter 8: Stimulus Control
1Chapter 8Stimulus Control
2Stimulus Control
- When social or nonsocial events precede operant
behavior and affect its occurrence, they are
called controlling stimuli. - A controlling stimulus (S) is said to alter the
probability of an operant, in the sense that the
response is more (or less) likely to occur when
the stimulus is present. - Discriminative stimulus (SD) - a controlling
stimulus that sets the occasion for reinforcement
of an operant. - S-delta (S?)or extinction stimulus- a stimulus
that sets the occasion for nonreinforcement or
extinction of an operant.
3What do these have in common?
- Visiting a restaurant when neon signs are
illuminated?
- Running only where the footprints are shallow (or
numerous)
4- Cat meows only at the window with lights on
- Drive in the lane with least traffic
5Answer All involve stimulus control!
- Stimulus control occurs when 1) a response occurs
in the presence of a stimulus and 2) does not
occur in its absence - Â organism is able to discriminate two or more
different situations - proof is in the behavior
6Emitted versus occasions
Operants can and do occur in the absence of any
eliciting stimulus, they are said to be freely
emitted. However, when an SD comes to control
occurrences of an operant, to alter its
probability of occurring, then it is said that
the SD occasions the operant. The term occasion
as a verb dictates that the operant is under the
stimulus control of an antecedent.
7Differential Reinforcement and Discrimination
- When an organism makes a response in one
situation but not in another, we say that the
animal shows a discrimination between the
situations. The simplest way to train a
differential response or discrimination is to
reinforce an operant in one situation and
withhold reinforcement in the other. - Stimulus control refers to a change in behavior
that occurs when either an SD or S? is presented.
When an SD is presented, the probability of
response increases when an S? is presented, the
probability of response decreases.
8How does stimulus control come about?
- Through differential reinforcement
- 1. Reinforce in the presence of one stimulus
- SD response? SR
- Red light press bar? food
Press lever
Food
9Do not reinforce in the presence of another
stimulus
- S? response? Ext
- Purple light press bar? no food
Press lever
Extinction
- if stimulus control is demonstrated, the rat
should press bar only when the red light is on,
and never press when the purple light is on
10- OR you may present an aversive stimulus as the
consequence - purple light press bar? shock
Shock
- purple light called S- or S? because it signals
punisher
11Stimulus Control and Multiple Schedules
- Behavior analysts often use multiple schedules of
reinforcement to study stimulus control in the
laboratory. - On a multiple schedule, two or more simple
schedules are presented one after the other and
each schedule is accompanied by a distinctive
stimulus.
12Stimulus Control
- One way to measure the stimulus control exerted
by the SD and at any moment is to use a
discrimination index (ID), This index compares
the rate of response in the SD component to the
sum of the rates in both SD and S? phases. - ID(SDrate)/(SDrate S? rate )
13Behavioral Contrast
- Occurs within subjects
- Operant responding is the dependent variable
- Measured on multiple schedules of reinforcement
- Two or more simple schedules that alternate
- Subject does not get to choose on which
schedule to respond
14Behavioral Contrast
- Positive contrast- when rate of response in an
unchanged setting increases with a decline in
behavior in another situation. - Negative contrast- when rate of response declines
in an unaltered situation with increases in
behavior in another setting.
15Behavioral Contrast (cont.)
- Negative Behavioral Contrast
- A decrease in response rate in one component of a
multiple schedule of reinforcement because the
conditions of reinforcement in another component
have gotten better - Positive Behavioral Contrast
- An increase in response rate in one component of
a multiple schedule because the conditions of
reinforcement in another component have gotten
worse
16Behavioral Contrast (cont.)
- Both positive and negative contrast is commonly
reported - Produced by the change in reinforcement in the
other component
17Behavioral Contrast
- Positive contrast
- Increase in unchanged component
- Negative contrast
- Decrease in unchanged component
In this example, subjects were reinforced on the
same schedule of reinforcement in phase 1 in
phase 2, responding during the light was on the
same schedule of reinforcement but during the
noise, responding was no longer reinforced and
positive contrast occurred in responding during
the light.
18Why contrast?
- Positive contrast increase in unchanged
component - Results from slower responding in changed
responding - Additivity theory classical plus operant
conditioning - Relative rate of reinforcement
19The Moral Behind Contrast Effects
- Contrast effects are instrumental in
demonstrating that reinforcement in other
situations can alter present behavior - Even when the other reinforcement is currently
available
20Contrast Effects
It is almost a cliché to say that when a child is
acting up at school, i.e., being disruptive,
hyperactive, etc.,there must be problemsat
home. Maybe but not so fast Maybe mom and dad
have implemented some strict requirements on
doing homework at home, reducing their sons
reinforcements at home. Positive contrast
theory predicts that the childs behavior will
increase in some form at school.
21Generalization
- An organism that responds in one situation but
not in another is said to discriminate between
the settings. - An organism that behaves similarly in different
situations is said to generalize across
circumstances.
22Stimulus Generalization
- Stimulus generalization occurs when an operant
that has been reinforced in the presence of a
specific discriminative stimulus also is emitted
in the presence of other stimuli. The process is
called stimulus generalization because the
operant is emitted to new stimuli that presumably
share common properties with the discriminative
stimulus. - Generalization and discrimination refer to
differences in the precision of stimulus control. - Discrimination refers to the precise control of
an operant by a stimulus, and generalization
involves less precise regulation of operant
behavior.
23Stimulus Generalization
- Stimulus Generalization The transfer of a
learned response from one stimulus to another,
similar stimulus.
24Basic Procedure
- Generalization training Responses to a stimulus
(S) are reinforced. - Discrimination training Responses to one
stimulus are reinforced, and responses to a
second stimulus (S-) are extinguished, put on
extinction.
25Basic Procedure
- Generalization test A variety of stimuli from
the same stimulus continuum are shown, one at a
time, under extinction conditions.
26Basic Procedure
Positive Stimulus
Generalization Test
27Basic Procedure
Stimulus Color
28Generalization Gradient
- A generalization gradient shows the relationship
between the probability of response and stimulus
value.
29Gradients and Learning
- The accuracy of responding improves as the
individual becomes more experienced with the
stimulus dimension.
30Experience Changes the Gradient
Novice
Expert
S
S
31The Guttman and Kalish procedure in an animation
Instructions The following slides are animated
automatically. You will only have to click your
mouse to advance from slide 1, (next slide
labeled Acquisition phase) to slide 2 (the
subsequent slide labeled Test phase). The slides
will advance themselves once you get to slide 2.
You will see a figure of a pigeon approach a
response key, a colored circle, and the pigeons
pecking responses are indicated by the star
shapes. The delivery of the food reinforcer is
illustrated by a group of small seed-like shapes
appearing in a food-hopper at the bottom of the
slide. They disappear when consumed by the
subject.
32Instructions The following slides are animated
automatically. You will only have to click your
mouse to advance from slide 1, (next slide
labeled Acquisition phase) to slide 2 (the
subsequent slide labeled Test phase). The slides
will advance themselves once you get to slide 2.
You will see a figure of a pigeon approach a
response key, a colored circle, and the pigeons
pecking responses are indicated by the star
shapes. The delivery of the food reinforcer is
illustrated by a group of small seed-like shapes
appearing in a food-hopper at the bottom of the
slide. They disappear when consumed by the
subject.
33- Slide 1 Acquisition Phase S key lit at
580nm - S - unlit key
34- Slide 2 Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli
(530nm through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
35Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
36- Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
37Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
38- Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
39- Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
40- Test Phase presentation of 11 stimuli (530nm
through 630nm) in random order in 12
different blocks responses are not
reinforced.
41Stimulus Generalization as a Measure of Stimulus
Control
Training S
Pigeons were trained to peck in the presence of a
colored light of 580 nm wavelength and then
tested in the presence of other colors.
After Guttman Kalish, 1956
42Generalization Gradient
As the previous slide showed, stimuli that have
similar dimensions to the S (or SD) occasions
more responses than stimuli that are more
divergent. Or, increasing physical similarity to
the training stimulus greater probability of
response
43Absolute and Relative Stimulus Control
- Peak shift is an unusual effect from the point of
view of control solely by a stimulus. - Absolute stimulus control means that the
probability of response is highest in the
presence of the stimulus value used in training. - In fact, this occurs when reinforcement is the
only procedure used to establish stimulus control
(and not extinction). - The shift in the peak of the generalization
gradient may reflect relative, rather than
absolute, stimulus control. Relative stimulus
control means that an organism responds to
differences among the values of two or more
stimuli.
44Peak Shift
- Peak Shift refers to the change in the peak of a
generalization gradient away from the stimulus
that signals extinction.
45Peak Shift
S
S-
46Peak Shift
- Body distortions in anorexia nervosa Anorexics
think that a larger than normal body size must be
avoided, is too big! and think that a thinner
than normal body size is the ideal
S
S-
47Absolute and Relative Stimulus Control
- There are other ways of showing relational
control by stimuli. To study generalization
gradients and peak shift, the researcher usually
arranges the presentation of SD or S? so that one
follows the other. This is called successive
discrimination. - An alternative procedure is labeled simultaneous
discrimination -the SD and the S? are presented
at the same time and the organism responds to one
or the other.
48The method by which you train affects the degree
of stimulus control
- SD only
- 2. SD and S-delta or SD and S-
49SD only (non-differential)
- A response trained to one discriminative stimulus
may occur in the presence to others that are
physically similar (generalization
One relation is trained
50Responses to similar stimuli are learned
51Another example
- What is trained
- Upon seeing a furry four-legged creature Say
dog?praise - What is learned
- Sees Cat dog?
- Sees Horse dog?
52Bottom line with SD only
- Generalization to all physically similar stimuli
is likely when SD only is trained - How does one learn NOT to generalize (i.e.,
discriminate)?
53SD and S-delta training orSD and S- training
(presence-absence training)
- When a stimulus correlating with extinction or
punishment is trained with the SD relationship,
finer discriminations develop
Two relations trained
54What is learned
- A finer discrimination between 500 and 600 units
of redness - Note slope is steeper with discrim. training
55Errorless Discrimination and Fading
- When the SD and the S? are alternately presented
as in successive discrimination, the organism
initially makes many errors. That is, the animal
or person continues to respond in the presence
of the S-delta on the basis of generalization. - As extinction and reinforcement progress, a
differential response occurs to the SD and S?.
56Errorless Discrimination and Fading
- A pigeon is taught to peck a green key for food.
Once this behavior is well established, the color
on the key is changed to blue and pecking is not
reinforced. The blue and green colors are
alternately presented and the corresponding
schedules of extinction or reinforcement are in
effect. During the early sessions, the onset of
extinction will generate emotional behavior that
interferes with ongoing operant behavior.
57Fading and Errorless Discrimination
- Extinction is an aversive procedure. Pigeons
flap their wings in an aggressive manner and will
work for an opportunity to attack another bird
during the presentation to the S? on a multiple
schedule. Birds will peck a different key if
pecking turns off the extinction stimulus,
implying that the stimulus is aversive.
58Fading and Errorless Discrimination
- There are other problems with successive
discrimination procedures. Because emotional
behavior is generated, discriminative responding
takes a long time to develop. In addition,
spontaneous recovery of S-delta responding from
session to session interferes with the
acquisition of a discrimination. Finally, even
after extensive training, birds and other
organisms continue to make errors by responding
in the presence of the signal for extinction.
59Errorless Discrimination
- Errorless discrimination is successful because
the trainer or teacher does not allow the
organism to make mistakes by responding to the
extinction stimulus. - Errorless discrimination involves gradually
introducing the S? initially at a very weak
intensity such that responding to it is very low
probability. Over repeated trials, the intensity
of the S? is gradually increased. Eventually the
S? can be presented in its full intensity and the
subject will not respond to it. A discrimination
between the SD and the S? was acquired without
the errors of responding to the S?.
60Errorless discrimination
- Training a discrimination by gradually
introducing the s-delta such that the organism
makes few (if any) responses to it - Red key peck disk? reinforcement
- Green key peck disk? no reinforcement
- First introduced as a dark disk and was
systematically faded into illumination
(Off)
SR
EXT
61SD stays same
S-delta faded in
By trial 50
By trial 100
By trial 150
62Result very few errors were made
- Few responses (errors) to the green key
- Under traditional procedure, responses to green
- key must occur for learning to take place
- Most (all) responses to the red key
63Errorless Discrimination Learning
- Terrace (1966)
- S? introduced early and at low intensity
- Fading procedure used
- S? not aversive
- No contrast
64Complex stimulus control
- Relational control when a relative property is
reinforced, e.g., the larger (smaller, greener,
etc.), that is what is learned
Darker is trained, darker is learned
SR
SR
SR
65A diagram of a typical matching to sample
procedure with pigeons Correct responses of
matching the comparison stimulus to the
sample stimulus are reinforced. Responses to the
incorrect comparison Stimulus are followed by a
blackout of the chamber lights and extinction.
66A matching to sample procedure as done with seals
or sea lions. Go here for video
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67 The matching to sample set up to teach verbal
interactions between two pigeons in Skinner
Epsteins Columban simulations.
68Delayed Matching to Sample and Remembering
- This variation of the matching to sample task has
been used to investigate behavior said to reflect
cognition and memory - Time b/w the offset of the stimulus and the onset
of the comparison is known as the retention
interval - Theoretically, the organism is covertly doing
something that helps to retain the information
about the sample
69Directed Forgetting
- In a variation of the DMTS procedure, during the
delay a specific stimulus was presented
indicating the matching comparison stimulus would
be presented after the delay. If another stimulus
was presented during the delay, the matching
comparison stimulus would not be presented and no
correct response was possible. - Douglas Grant found that the probability of a
correct response to the comparison stimulus could
be reduced by presenting the stimulus for no
correct comparison stimulus and in fact the
correct comparison stimulus was then presented.
This effect was termed directed forgetting and
its effect was varied depending upon when the
stimulus was presented in the delay interval.
Attributing directed forgetting to stimulus
control is a more straightforward explanation
than to inferred disrupted rehearsal.
70Here is a matching version of the task (DMTS)
used with pigeons.
Here the sample stimulus is presented, a delay
period is introduced, followed by the
presentation of the comparison stimuli. The
duration of the sample stimulus and the delay
duration are manipulated as variables.
71- Discrimination learning
- Small number of simple stimuli with well-defined
and unambiguous differences between S and S- - Concept Formation
- Use of more stimuli, with more abstract defining
features - Positive elements, defining the stimulus as
belonging to the concept. A fish is defined by
specific stimulus features if the features are
present in a stimulus, the stimulus is a fish. - Negative elements, defining the stimulus as not
belonging to the concept, a starfish is clearly
not a fish. Neither is a whale but a whale is
easily confused as being a fish
72Non-Human Studies on Natural Concept Formation
- Herrnstein - Pigeons
- Pigeons can learn to form concepts of a person as
discriminated from non-persons, i.e., statues,
mannequins, etc., a specific person from others,
etc. The abstract stimulus class of person
readily learned. - Pigeons can learn to form natural concepts of
persons, trees, fish, etc., with a high degree of
accuracy. Artificial concepts such as buildings
also learned. - Pigeons appear to respond to two-dimensions
objects (photographs) as representations of three
dimensional objects
73Conditional Discrimination
- An SD or S? can be defined as a function of
additional contextual stimuli. A pigeon may have
to learn that if the houselight of an operant
chamber is illuminated, pecking the green
response key delivers food. If no houselight,
pecking the red key delivers food, Thus, if
houselight present, green key SD, red key S?.
If no houselight, green key S?, red key SD. - To a sexual sadist and their masochist partner,
no means no outside of their sex lives. But
in the context of sexual activities, the
masochists cries of No, no, no means Yes,
yes, yes to the sadist. In the same context,
pink or red (so-called safe words) will mean
no or stop.
74Stimulus Control andLife
- Studying
- Sleeping (Insomnia)
- Writing
75Discriminating internal sensations can be trained
by discrimination procedures
- What is trained
- Drug press drug lever? food
- (reinforcement of saying Yes, Ive had drug
when there is drug in system) - Saline press drug lever? no food
- (extinction of saying Yes, Ive had drug when
there is NO drug in system) - AND
- Drug press no drug lever? no food
- (extinction of saying No, I dont have drug
when there IS drug in system) - Saline press no drug lever? food
- (extinction of saying No, I dont have drug
when there IS drug in system)
76What is trained.
S-delta
SD
Amphetamine (mg/kg)
77What is learned
- Test different levels of drug (low to high) the
more similar the drug feels to the trained
drug, the more the animal generalizes - What shape do you think the curve is?