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LEARNING

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Title: LEARNING


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LEARNING
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(No Transcript)
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Learning
  • A relatively permanent change in behavior due to
    experience

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Classical Conditioning
  • Module 15

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Classical Conditioning
  • A type of learning where a stimulus gains the
    power to cause a response because it predicts
    another stimulus that already produces that
    response
  • Form of learning by association

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Stimulus-Response
  • Stimulus - anything in the environment that one
    can respond to
  • Response any behavior or action

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Stimulus-Response Relationship
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Stimulus-Response Relationship
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Behaviorism
  • The view that psychology should restrict its
    efforts to studying observable behaviors, not
    mental processes.
  • Founded by John Watson

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Components of Classical Conditioning
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS)
  • A stimulus that triggers a response automatically
    and reflexively

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Unconditioned Response (UCR)
  • The automatic response to the unconditioned
    stimulus
  • The relationship between the UCS and UCR must be
    reflexive and not learned

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Conditioned Stimulus (CS)
  • A stimulus that through learning has gained the
    power to cause a conditioned response
  • The CS must be a neutral stimulus before
    conditioning occurs.

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Conditioned Response
  • The response to the conditioned stimulus
  • Usually the same behavior as the UCR

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Classical Conditioning Processes Acquisition
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Acquisition
  • The process of developing a learned response
  • The subject learns a new response (CR) to a
    previously neutral stimulus (CS)

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Acquisition
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Classical Conditioning Processes Extinction and
Spontaneous Recovery
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Extinction
  • The diminishing of a learned response
  • In classical conditioning, the continual
    presentation of the CS without the UCS

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Extinction
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Spontaneous Recovery
  • The reappearance, after a rest period, of an
    extinguished conditioned response

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Spontaneous Recovery
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Ivan Pavlovs Discovery
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)
  • A Russian physiologist who discovered classical
    conditioning while doing experiments on the
    digestive system of dogs

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Pavlovs Method of Collecting Saliva
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Pavlovs Research Apparatus
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Pavlovs Experiment
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Pavlovs Experiment
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Pavlovs Experiment
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Generalization and Discrimination
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Generalization
  • Process in which an organism produces the same
    response to two similar stimuli
  • The more similar the substitute stimulus is to
    the original used in conditioning, the stronger
    the generalized response

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Generalization
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Discrimination
  • A process in which an organism produces different
    responses to two similar stimuli
  • The subject learns that one stimuli predicts the
    UCS and the other does not.

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Classical Conditioning in Everyday LifeLittle
Albert
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Little Albert
  • 11-month-old infant
  • Watson and his assistant, Rosalie Rayner,
    conditioned Albert to be frightened of white rats
  • Led to questions about experimental ethics

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Little Albert Before Conditioning
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Little Albert During Conditioning
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Little Albert After Conditioning
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Little Albert - Generalization
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Classical Conditioning in Everyday LifeTaste
Aversion
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Taste Aversion
  • Subjects become classically conditioned to avoid
    specific tastes, because the tastes are
    associated with nausea.
  • John Garcia (1917- )

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Cognition and Biological Predispositions
  • Module 15 Classical Conditioning

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Robert Rescorla (1940- )
  • Developed a theory emphasizing the importance of
    cognitive processes in classical conditioning
  • Pointed out that subjects had to determine
    (think) whether the CS was a reliable predictor
    of the UCS

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Biological Perspective
  • We are predisposed to learn things that affect
    our survival.
  • We are predisposed to avoid threats our ancestors
    faced--food that made us sick, storms, heights,
    snakes, etc.--but not modern-day threats--cars,
    water pollution, etc.

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The End
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