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Chapter 8

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Chapter 8 Learning: Operant Conditioning Objective: Differentiate between reinforcement and punishment through notes, discussion and practice. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8


1
Chapter 8 Learning Operant Conditioning
  • Objective Differentiate between reinforcement
    and punishment through notes, discussion and
    practice.

2
OPERANT CONDITIONING
  • Operant Conditioning a type of learning in
    which behavior is strengthened if followed by a
    reinforcer or diminished if followed by a
    punisher.
  • Reinforcement Behavior Encouraged
  • Punishment Behavior Discouraged

3
People to Know
  • Edward Thorndike one of the first psychologists
    to research operant conditioning
  • Law of Effect if the consequences of behavior
    are pleasant, the stimulus response will be
    strengthened. If the consequences are unpleasant,
    the stimulus response will be weakened.
  • thorndike-puzzle box - YouTube

4
People to Know
  • B.F. Skinner best known psychologist to study
    operant conditioning (he coined this term)
  • Skinner box (operant chamber) - contraption that
    delivers food to an animal and contains a lever
    to press in order to get the food. It also
    contains an electric grid.

5
The Skinner Box
6
Skinner Box Video
  • Are we Conditioned or do we have Free Will?
    YouTube starting at 100 till end?

7
Shaping
  • Shaping an operant conditioning procedure in
    which reinforcers guide behavior closer and
    closer toward the desired goal.
  • Ex. Rat basketball at Discovery Place
  • Ex. Sea World, Bird shows, the circus
  • Ex. Your Dogs or Cats.
  • BF Skinner Foundation - Pigeon Ping Pong Clip
    YouTube
  • pigeons - YouTube
  • Ex. Hot/Cold Game
  • Psychology - Learning-Classical Operant
    Conditioning-2.avi YouTube (100)

8
Reinforcement
  • Reinforcement anything that makes a behavior
    more likely to occur
  • Think.
  • POSITIVE ADDING
  • NEGATIVE TAKING AWAY

9
Positive Reinforcement
  • Positive Reinforcement addition of something
    pleasant
  • Ex. Rat is given food when it presses a lever
  • Ex. Money encourages you to come to work
  • Ex. Attention from a parent encourages the child
    to continue crying
  • Ex. Receiving a good grade encourages you to
    study
  • Positive Reinforcement - The Big Bang Theory
    YouTube. Q Sanding off the edges, tweak?

10
Negative Reinforcement
  • Negative Reinforcement removal of something
    unpleasant
  • Ex. While in a cage, a rat receives a mild shock
    on his feet, the rat presses a lever and the
    shock stops. The rat moves and receives the shock
    again, pressing the lever once again the rat
    removes the undesirable shock. Taking away the
    shock encourages the rat to press the lever.
  • Ex. To avoid heavy traffic, you leave an hour
    earlier for work (leaving work earlier is
    encouraged by removing heavy traffic)

11
Negative Reinforcement (cont)
  • Ex. You do the dishes and your parent stops
    yelling
  • Ex. Aspirin takes away a headache you are
    encouraged to take medication by removing the
    headache.
  • Ex. You are encouraged to do well at work by
    getting a day off
  • Ex. You passed all of your exams during the year
    so you do not have to take the final.
  • Positive and Negative Reinforcement - YouTube

12
Types of reinforcers
  • Primary reinforcers those innately satisfying,
    satisfies a biological need
  • Ex. food, relief from shock
  • Conditioned / Secondary reinforcers those
    learned
  • Become reinforcers through association as the
    secondary and primary reinforcers are paired
    together.
  • The conditioned reinforcer is initially neutral
  • Ex. Money, praise, attention
  • We learn at a young age to associate money with
    fulfilling our needs.

13
Punishment
  • Punishment anything that makes behavior less
    likely
  • Think.
  • POSITIVE ADDING
  • NEGATIVE TAKING AWAY

14
Positive Punishment
  • Positive Punishment (oftentimes just called
    punishment) the addition of something
    unpleasant
  • Ex. Rat receives shock when it presses a bar. The
    rat becomes less likely to press the bar having
    received the shock.
  • Ex. Spanking a child keeps them from repeating a
    behavior
  • Ex. Boss complains about your poor work
    performance
  • Ex. Run 4 additional laps b/c you were late to
    practice.

15
Negative Punishment
  • Negative Punishment the removal of something
    pleasant
  • Ex. Remove the rats food when it presses a
    lever. The rat is less likely to press the lever.
  • Ex. Teen is grounded for a week for making bad
    grades. Fun has been removed and bad grades
    become less likely.
  • Ex. Boss reduces expense account after poor
    performance
  • Ex. Youre excluded from gym class because you
    were late.

16
Reinforcement and Punishment Review
  • Complete Reinforcement vs. Punishment exercise

17
Reinforcement Timing
  • Timing of Reinforcement
  • If the reinforcement occurs directly after the
    wanted behavior, conditioning is more likely to
    occur. (especially with animals)
  • Humans CAN learn with delayed presentation of
    reinforcement.
  • Paycheck, good grades, trophies
  • all are delayed gratification

18
Parts of operant conditioning
  • Operant Conditioning contains the parts of
    Acquisition
  • Extinction
  • Spontaneous recovery
  • Generalization
  • Discrimination

19
Reinforcement Schedules
  • Continuous (all the time)
  • Partial (sometimes)
  • Fixed (constant)
  • Variable (changing)
  • Ratio (responses)
  • Interval (time)

20
Reinforcement Schedules
  • Reinforcement schedules
  • Continuous reinforcement reinforcing desired
    behavior every time it occurs
  • With this schedule, extinction occurs quickly.
  • Partial Reinforcement reinforcing response only
    part of the time
  • Acquisition is slower
  • Greater resistance to extinction than continuous
    reinforcement

21
Fixed Ratio Reinforcement
  • Fixed Ratio Schedules reinforcing respondent
    only after a specified number of responses
  • Produces a high rate of response
  • Ex. Rat receives a food pellet every 7 times he
    presses the bar

22
Variable Ratio Reinforcement
  • Variable- Ratio Schedule reinforcing respondent
    after an unpredictable number of responses
  • High rate of response, very resistant to
    extinction
  • Ex. Slot machines pay money in unpredictable
    intervals

23
Fixed Interval Reinforcement
  • Fixed-Interval Schedule reinforcing a response
    after a specified amount of time has elapsed
  • Responses tend to increase at time for next
    reinforcer and then drop after reinforcement
  • Ex. Monthly paycheck performance improves close
    to paycheck time

24
Variable Interval Reinforcement
  • Variable-Interval Schedule reinforcing a
    response after an unpredictable amount of time
    has elapsed.
  • Relatively low response rate, but realistic since
    we cannot always predict when reward will come.
  • Ex. Pop quizzes (reinforcing studying on a varied
    schedule)
  • Ex. Youve Got Mail encourages you to check
    your email.

25
Reinforcement schedules Review
  • B.F. Skinner - Operant Conditioning and Free Will
    YouTube
  • (begin at 100)

26
Token Economy
  • Used just like at carnivals. This experiment took
    place at a middle school. Students were given
    tokens for good behaviors and have tokens taken
    away for bad behaviors. Tokens are cashed in for
    prizes or extra recess time etc.
  • Q What were the results?

27
Token Economy (continued)
  • Q. Do we use operant conditioning in schools?
  • Schools- Criticism in schools. This may undermine
    intrinsic motivation- led to open and
    Montesourri schools where students receive little
    or no grades/have few rules NWSchool of Arts.
  • Pay for Performance..Teachers and extrinsic
    motivation

28
Overjustification effect
  • the effect of promising a reward for doing what
    one already likes to do.
  • Person or Animal begins to have extrinsic
    motivation rather than intrinsic motivation.
  • Ex. Do you go to work to contribute to society or
    to get a paycheck?

29
Overjustification Effect
  • Ex. Do you study to learn or to get good grades?
  • Ex. College Athletes vs. Professional Athletes
  • Ex. Study with Kindergartners and good
  • player badges.
  • RSA Animate - Drive The surprising truth
    about what motivates us - YouTube

30
CMS (now NC) / Pay for Performance
  • Lose of intrinsic value
  • With increased testing teachers will teach to the
    test, task will involve much less creativity,
    mastery. Incentives will have difficulty
    measuring creativity, are not designed to measure
    higher level thinking skills.

31
Instinctive Drift
  • There is a limit to what we can teach with
    operant conditioning
  • Animals will not perform behaviors that go
    against their natural inclinations.
  • Ex. Rats will not walk backwards
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