Title: Chapter 9: Behaviourism
1Chapter 9 Behaviourism
- A History of Psychology
- (3rd Edition)
- John G. Benjafield
2Ivan P. Pavlov (18491936)
- Set out to become a priest
- Abandoned idea after reading a Russian
translation of Darwin - 1883 became a medical doctor
- 1904 awarded Nobel Prize
- Work on the physiology of the digestive system
3Pavlovs Animals
- Early career
- Often took his animals home because of a lack of
facilities at the university - Later career
- Constructed an Institute of Experimental Medicine
in St Petersburg (1891)
4Conditioned Reflexes
- I.M. Sechenov (18291905) Cerebral Reflexes
- Proposed that mental life should be understood
entirely in physiological terms - Reflex is the appropriate unit of explanation
- Pavlov dissociated himself from the psychology of
the time
5Conditioned Reflexes
- Unconditioned reflexes
- The same response always occurs in the presence
of the same stimulus - Unconditioned Stimulus
- Conditioned Stimulus
- Conditioned Response
- Unconditioned Response
6Facts Conditioning
- A conditioned response is usually smaller in
magnitude than an unconditioned one - Extinction The CR will eventually cease if the
CS is repeatedly presented alone - Spontaneous recovery A previously extinguished
CR may return after a period of rest
7Speech
- Higher-order conditioning A second CS is paired
with a CS that has already been established - Primary signalling system consists largely of
sensory stimuli - Secondary signalling system consists largely of
words - Words name primary signals
8Temperaments and Psychopathology
- Fundamental cortical processes
- Excitation
- Inhibition
- Temperaments arranged on a scale
- Choleric (extremely excitatory)
- Sanguine
- Phlegmatic
- Melancholic (extremely inhibitory)
9Vivisection and Anti-vivisectionism
- Vivisection the dissection of live animals
- Anti-vivisectionism the movement against the use
of live animals in research
10Vladimir M. Bekhterev (18571927)
- Reflexology attempt to explain all behaviour,
from the individual to the social, in terms of
the reflex concept - Developed a technique for studying associated
motor reflexes in both dogs and humans
11John B. Watson (18781958)
- 1899 graduated from Furman University
- Graduate student at University of Chicago
- Impressed by Jacques Loeb (18591924)
- 1903 doctoral dissertation in animal psychology
- 1908 Faculty at Johns Hopkins University
12Psychology as the Behaviourist Views It
- Published in 1913
- Challenged psychologists to change virtually
every aspect of their discipline - Not a study of consciousness
- Study human behaviour in same way as animal
behaviour
13Habits
- Behaviorism (1939) humans are unique because of
the variety of habits they can form through
conditioning - 1. Visceral (emotional) habits
- 2. Manual habits
- 3. Laryngeal (verbal) habits
14Emotional Habits
- Can only study emotion via very young children
- Innate emotional responses fear, rage, love
- Little Albert study
- Produced conditioned emotional reactions in an
11-month-old infant
15Manual Habits
- the entire range of muscular responses
- Manual habits form through repetition
- Formation permits smooth transition from one
situation to the next - Watson advocated distributed practice to acquire
skills (vs. massed practice)
16Verbal Habits
- Thought same as internal speech
- Verbal habits constitute thinking
- Speech is a serially-ordered behaviour
17Watsons Second Career
- Following second marriage (to Rosalie Rayner),
Watson worked for - J. Walter Thompson advertising agency
- William Esty Co.
- Watson transferred principles of conditioning to
advertising
18Karl S. Lashley (18901958)
- Undergraduate at University of West Virginia
- PhD at Johns Hopkins
- Under Herbert S. Jenings
- Postdoctoral studies with Watson
19Cortical Localization of Function
- 1916 Lashley studied with Shepherd Ivory Franz
- Ablation technique by which parts of the cortex
are destroyed and the results observed - Studied the effects of ablation on the frontal
lobes in rats - 1917 moved to University of Minnesota
20Brain Mechanisms and Intelligence
- Law of mass action learning and memory depend on
the total mass of brain tissue remaining - Law of equipotentiality within limits, any part
of an area can do the job of any other part of
that area
21The Problem of Serial Order in Behaviour
- Criticized Watsons associative chain theory
- Priming of responses
- Spoonerisms
22B.F. Skinner (19041990)
- . . . behaviour which seemed to be the product
of mental activiy could be explained in other
ways. - Consciousness a form of behaviour
23The Behavior of Organisms
- Published in 1938
- Respondent behaviour elicited by a known
stimulus - Operant behaviour no known eliciting stimulus
- Studied by means of a Skinner box
24The Behavior of Organisms
- Behaviour regulated by Three-term Contingencies
- Environment provides a stimulus situation
- Which elicits a response
- Which is followed by a reinforcing stimulus
- Reward or punishment
- Negative reinforcement ? punishment
25A Case History in Scientific Method
- Published in 1956
- Discussed the ways in which Skinner made
discoveries - Applied the principles of his psychology to his
own creativity - Ex. When you run into something interesting,
drop everything else and study it - Ex. Apparatuses sometimes break down
26The Baby Tender
- Air crib Baby tender
- Built for his second daughter
- Wrote about the innovation in the popular press
- Baby in a box
27Teaching Machines
- Typical classroom reinforcement only when the
child does the work required to avoid punishment - Skinner suggested reinforce students for each
response in a sequence that gradually builds up
28Skinners Utopian and Dystopian Views
- Walden Two (1948)
- Utopian novel of a community regulated by
positive reinforcement - Received mixed reviews
- Skinner increasingly discussed the dystopian
features of modern life in the West - Dystopia a society that is the opposite of a
Utopia